The development comes close on the heels of the government dismissing six leaders of the National Health Mission Employees Association (NHMEA) on Tuesday.
"The government has also imposed section 144 of the CrPC in a radius of one km of all hospitals to keep striking employees away," Health Minister Anil Vij said here today.
Three from Bhiwani district, four from Faridabad, two each from Hisar and Karnal, six each from Sonipat and Palwal, three from Rewari, nine each from Gurugram and Sirsa, five from Panchkula and four from Jind have been dismissed, he said.
Orders have been issued to all Civil Surgeons to replace drivers of referral transports, who are on strike, with fresh recruitments, so that patients do not suffer, the minister said.
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"It is ironical, NHM employees admit and know that their services cannot be regularised but still they are agitating, he said, blaming the previous Congress government for appointing several NHM workers allegedly by ignoring rules.
"Former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, during his regime, had appointed his workers in NHM by setting aside all rules. Now these employees are instigating and forcing others to go on strike," Vij alleged in an official statement here.
"Even then they are insisting to continue the strike," he said, adding adequate arrangements have been made in hospitals so that patients do not suffer and today a number of striking employees have decided to return to work in many districts.
Action would be taken against those who would go on strike, which has been declared illegal by the government, he added.
On Tuesday, the Haryana government had terminated the services of six office-bearers of the NHMEA for going on strike, instigating others and disrupting government health services in the state.
"These employees had been hired on contract under the NHM for completing a specific task within a specified period," he said.
"In view of the prevailing season of malaria, dengue, chikunguya and other vector-borne diseases, the strike was not only against moral responsibility, but also risked the health of patients," he said, adding "some external forces were instigating the employees."
"External forces" would not be allowed to "instigate" employees, officers and doctors of the health department," he said.
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