In a statement, the union expressed its “humiliation and stupor” by this order, accusing the judge of “unjustly closing the investigation, leaving the great unknowns in the air”, meaning “giving up the clarification of the facts”.
Euskaraz irakurri: LABek helegitea aurkeztuko du Osakidetzako lan-eskaintza publikoaren ikerketa ez luzatzeko autoaren aurka
The LAB union announced this Saturday that it will appeal the decision of the judge who instructed the case before the alleged leakage of exams in the Osakidetza OPE 2016-2017 not to extend the investigation into this case for another six months, as requested by that center and ESK.
In a statement, LAB told her “humiliation and stupor” by this injunction and accused the judge of “unjustly closing the investigation, leaving the great unknowns in the air”, meaning “giving up the clarification of the facts”.
“Failing to grant our request to expand the investigation is a troubling setback for those of us who want clean PPOs. Closing the investigation at this point reinforces important spaces of impunity for the leakers and for Osakidetza’s management.” , criticized the union, calling on the Basque health service to “promote and protect these leaks” in order to maintain control of the institution through “a patronage network that rewards those who bend to its plans with public employment positions.”
For all these reasons, he explained that his legal services will present a report in the coming daysreform course for a car in which “it has been given priority to get on the shelf”, rather than positioning itself for the pending lawsuit requested by LAB.
The judge’s decision came after the award of two previous extensions every six months. The latter started in early February and ends this month, so these unions had requested another semester to request more documents and witness evidence, a request that has now been denied.
In the past six months, the exams of the 21 PEO specialties to examine whether they contained “keywords” that appeared “underlined and in capital letters” and that “served to identify at first sight the people who should get a good score”, as in the opinion of these unions did those of Traumatology.
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Source: EITB

I’m Wayne Wickman, a professional journalist and author for Today Times Live. My specialty is covering global news and current events, offering readers a unique perspective on the world’s most pressing issues. I’m passionate about storytelling and helping people stay informed on the goings-on of our planet.