“The Imbroda Government wants to create a crisis where there is none. In Melilla the screenings have been carried out, where negligence has been committed in Andalusia and, therefore, they have tried to show that in Melilla there is a crisis where it does not exist because in Melilla the screenings were being done.”
The Government Delegate, Sabrina Moh, has criticized the attitude of the Autonomous City Government regarding cancer screenings, accusing it of trying to create a non-existent controversy and acting for partisan purposes.
The highest representative of the Government of Spain in our city has described as “reckless” that the Ministry of Public Health rose from the Interterritorial Council of the National Health System, a body of cooperation, dialogue and interterritorial coordination.
“If Public Health is so concerned about the issue of screenings, what proves anything but concern is to get up from a dialogue table where, by the way, important money has stopped being distributed for this issue,” he said.
At this point Moh has asked to put aside the institutional clashes and focus on working together for the benefit of the Melillenses. “Beyond sending communiqués and saying who the competition is, what we need to do is for everyone to assume their own and continue working for the good of the Melillense citizens, which is what we are going to do from the Government of Spain because we do care,” he said.
The Delegate has insisted that the priority must be the health of the population, not political confrontation. “When you worry about an issue, you sit down at a dialogue table and not, for an electoral and partisan reason, rise up with the rest of your colleagues. That proves anything less than the sifting of your land worries you,” he said.