Ennahdha MP Noureddine Bhiri stated that similar to the elevator at Jendoua hospital, the social elevator was, to say the least, is breaking down.
He accentuated that people of a particular social category can no longer raise their standard of living, through diplomas and studies, as was the case before.
He additionally recalled that obligatory and free education was one of the significant achievements of the state after independence, which had bet on human capital.
Bhiri likewise criticised the disparity between universities in the capital and those in the interior, telling the latter are nowhere near comparable to large university campuses which have significantly more solid infrastructure.
The training of a doctor is high-priced for the state, so it is very sad that over 4000 doctors are now jobless when they could add to the development of the country, he regretted.
The deputy, in the same perspective, condemned the acts of police violence perpetrated against doctors in the sit-in at the headquarters of the Ministry of Higher Education, calling for the establishment of a strategy based on a ” courageous diagnosis ”.
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