Signs of Pharmaceutical Crisis in Syria

Dentistry faculty at the Damascus University, Syria, EPA
Dentistry faculty at the Damascus University, Syria, EPA
TT

Signs of Pharmaceutical Crisis in Syria

Dentistry faculty at the Damascus University, Syria, EPA
Dentistry faculty at the Damascus University, Syria, EPA

Hit by the devaluation of the Syrian pound, Syria’s pharmaceutical industry is facing an exacerbating crisis. MP Waddah Murad warned that pharmaceutical factories will shut down within a week.

“Medicine and food are a red and dangerous line for the people… You have so far failed in food, and are on your way to closing Syrian pharmaceutical factories that used to cover the needs of the local market, at the cheapest prices, and export their product to more than fifty-eight countries,” Murad said in his address to parliament.

Murad lambasted the government for asking pharmaceuticals to price medicines according to the dollar exchange rate, saying that most of the industry will be shut down within a week after the depletion of raw materials.
The pharmaceutical industry in Syria is considered one of the most developed investment sectors since the establishment of the first pharmaceutical company in 1968.

“Al-Dimass” and “Tamiko” pharmaceuticals were nationalized in 1970. Al-Dimass, which is run by the country’s defense ministry, produces serums, antibiotics and anesthetics. Tamiko, which is run by the country’s health ministry, produces cytamol, diabetes and pressure drugs, as well as serums.

More so, Barakat Pharmaceutical Industries was established in 1972.

In 1987 the private sector was allowed to invest in pharmaceuticals, and the "Aubrey Pharmaceutical Industries" company obtained the first license for the pharmaceutical industry from the private sector in 1989.

After that, there was a leap in the Syrian pharmaceutical industry, more than 28 laboratories were established, bringing the number of factories to about 70 in 2011.

The 70 factories were responsible for producing more than 8,000 drugs, covering 93% of the local market's need, with surpluses exported to more than 44 countries.

According to official data, pharmaceuticals in Syria were hit greatly by war, whereby 19 factories were put out of business and the overall production rate dropped by 75%.



Starbucks Workers Expand Strike in US Cities Including New York

Starbucks workers hold signs as they picket during a strike in front of a Starbucks to demand collective bargaining agreements in Burbank, California on December 20, 2024. (AFP)
Starbucks workers hold signs as they picket during a strike in front of a Starbucks to demand collective bargaining agreements in Burbank, California on December 20, 2024. (AFP)
TT

Starbucks Workers Expand Strike in US Cities Including New York

Starbucks workers hold signs as they picket during a strike in front of a Starbucks to demand collective bargaining agreements in Burbank, California on December 20, 2024. (AFP)
Starbucks workers hold signs as they picket during a strike in front of a Starbucks to demand collective bargaining agreements in Burbank, California on December 20, 2024. (AFP)

Starbucks workers have expanded their strike to four more US cities, including New York, the union representing over 10,000 baristas said late on Saturday.

The five-day strike, which began on Friday and initially closed Starbucks cafes in Los Angeles, Chicago and Seattle, has added New Jersey, New York, Philadelphia and St. Louis, Workers United said in a statement. It did not say where the New Jersey walkout was occurring.

Starbucks did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours.

Talks between the coffee chain and the union hit an impasse with unresolved issues over wages, staffing and schedules, leading to the strike.

The union is striking in 10 cities, also including Columbus, Denver and Pittsburgh, during the busy holiday season that may impact the company's Christmas sales.

Workers United warned on Friday that the strike could reach "hundreds of stores" by Tuesday, Christmas Eve.

Starbucks began negotiations with the union in April. It said this month it had conducted more than eight bargaining sessions, during which 30 agreements had been reached.

The company operates more than 11,000 stores in the United States, employing about 200,000 workers.