Kuwait is to bar foreigners from attending public hospitals in the mornings, local media reported today, in a decision activists labelled as "racist".
The decision comes after complaints in parliament of Kuwaiti patients having to wait for treatment at public health facilities because of the large number of expatriates.
Health Minister Mohammad al-Haifi, who is also a surgeon, ordered that the outpatient clinics at the public hospital in Jahra, west of Kuwait City, will only receive Kuwaiti patients in the morning from June 1.
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Kuwait is home to 2.6 million foreigners, mostly from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Egypt and Syria, and 1.2 million native Kuwaitis.
The new system will be applied at the clinics at Jahra hospital for six months on a "trial basis before its application at other (government) hospitals".
Kuwait provides free medical services to citizens but expats must pay an annual fee of USD 175 each besides paying reduced charges for certain procedures like x-ray.
Activists in the oil-rich Gulf state condemned the move, and opposition lawyer and writer Mohammad Abdulqader al-Jassem described it as "racial segregation" on Twitter.
Similar restrictions are in place at other government agencies such as the traffic department, which handles applications from Kuwaitis only in the morning.