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British medical graduates may be given priority on jobs

London, Oct 9 (UNI) The UK Government proposes to slash the numbers of junior doctors from overseas coming to train in the UK in an attempt to preserve jobs for the rising number of British medical graduates.

The Health Minister Ben Bradshaw said yesterday ''if overseas applicants were preventing those educated here from getting specialist training places, then it is only right that we should consider what needs to be done.'' The Government has proposed that doctors from countries outside the European Union (EU) should not be considered for a job unless there are no qualified applicants from the UK or from elsewhere in Europe.

''Presently there are 6,451 medical schools in U K as compared to 3,749 in 1997, and the cost of training each student went up to 250,000 pounds,'' said Mr Bradshaw.

Acccording to on independent report by the Inaugural Dean of the Peninula College of Medicine and Dentistry Sir John Tooke one of the reasons for scrapping the computerised application scheme for junior doctors, training to be consultants was due to a large number of overseas doctors applying for the course.

It had been "a deeply damaging episode for British medicine", he said adding, reforms of medical training and the flawed online Medical Training Application Service (MTAS), were rushed through without proper preparation.

The furore over MTAS ran for months, with highly qualified junior doctors threatening to go abroad because they had not been called for a single interview. Eventually MTAS, which had been intended to simplify and centralise applications for training posts, was crapped.

Sir John said that the recruitment problem would recur again if the status of overseas doctors was not be resolved. Under his proposals, the medical students of UK would automatically get a first-year hospital training place on graduation, which would give them a head start over even the European candidates.

Mr Hamish Meldrum, Chairman of the British Medical Association, emphasised the importance of doctors being involved in the management of the health service.

UNI

US to set up industrial zones in Pak tribal region

Islamabad, Oct 9: The United States has agreed to Pakistan's demand to set up Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (RoZs) in the NWFP and Balochistan provinces, officials said. The ROZ's would be established on the pattern of Quality Industrial Zones (QIZs) established between Israel and Jordan. Under the agreement all products manufactured in the RoZs will be exported to the US markets with zero duty. The official said the project was aimed at developing the tribal areas, infested with radicals and al-Qaeda operatives,.....

Toyota aims for 2007 Japan sales well below target

TOKYO, Oct 9 (Reuters) Toyota Motor Corp will aim to sell around 1.65 million vehicles in Japan this year, its president said, providing a goal well below the company's initial target of 1.72 million and sending its shares lower. Executives at the world's biggest automaker as recently as last week had stood by the original target, given at the end of 2006, citing hopes for a late rebound with the rush of new model launches. ''We want to go to around.....

Malaysian growth model hits up against its limits

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 9 (Reuters) Spoilt by a diet of state spending and protection, Malaysia's economy has lost its sparkle, but reforms to revive growth and cut public debt may mean dumping affirmative-action policies that underpin government support. State intervention has helped transform Malaysia from an agrarian backwater into a manufacturing hub, but growth has faltered this decade and some economists urge market-based reforms, with less protection for majority ethnic Malays. ''The current leadership has yet to embrace ideas of reform,''.....
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