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Comment: Playing politics with Malaria
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 05, 09-Feb-05)
By Richard Tren
in Harare
February 09,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_005_2_eng.txt
Government’s politicisation
of healthcare hampers work of malaria control workers at every turn.
The rainy season has
begun in Zimbabwe, which is welcome news for gardeners and farmers alike.
Over the past few weeks, dramatic thunderstorms and heavy downpours have
covered much of the country, sparking vigorous growth in plants and whatever
few crops have been planted. But while the rains bring new life, they
unfortunately also mark the beginning of the malaria transmission season.
This year, malaria,
along with almost every aspect of life in Zimbabwe has a political slant
to it. This deadly mix of politics and disease does not augur well for
ordinary Zimbabweans now more than ever at peril from mosquitoes and their
own government.
I was recently asked
by Zimbabwe’s malaria control programme to assist them in communicating
their new malaria control policy, which includes the use of DDT. DDT is
sprayed in tiny quantities inside houses and is one of the most effective
ways of controlling the disease. It is also somewhat controversial because
of the bad reputation that DDT has among environmentalists. I agreed to
assist as I thought that I may help to save some lives and improve malaria
control in that country. This was a mistake.
The Zimbabwean Department
of Health had organised two events, a press conference in Harare followed
by a public rally near Lake Kariba in the north west of the country. Both
events had an overt political agenda that in the current climate in Zimbabwe
is both sickening and dangerous.
Not a single journalist
from the remains of Zimbabwe’s independent media had been invited to the
press conference in Harare. Only writers from the state media, who unquestioningly
regurgitate the violent and abusive messages of the Mugabe government,
were involved.
Matters deteriorated
at the public rally, which was held in an area that is not a stronghold
for the ruling ZANU PF party. During the last parliamentary election,
a number of awful atrocities were committed in the area against supporters
of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, party. While Kariba
is a highly malarial area, the choice to hold a government malaria rally
there was probably a carefully thought out strategy.
The audience was divided
between the locals from the village, who crowded underneath a large green
tent that had seen better days, and supposed VIPs, such as World Health
Organisation, WHO, staff and dignitaries who were under a slightly smarter
large striped tent. A raised, covered stage, decked in the colours of
the Zimbabwean flag and flanked by large photographs of Mugabe, housed
the event’s speakers which included the ministers of health for Zimbabwe
and Malawi as well as a representative from UNICEF and, interestingly,
one from Mugabe’s arch enemy, the British Aid agency, DFID.
Before the speeches
and songs about malaria could begin, the master of ceremonies asked local
ZANU PF office bearers from the VIP tent to identify themselves and give
a rousing message to the crowd. One "comrade" after another
stood up and shouted "Forward with Mugabe" and "Down with
the MDC" to which the crowd was supposed to respond "Forward"
and "Down" in turn. The lack of enthusiasm from the locals was
very apparent, but there were many in the VIP tent gleefully raising their
fists.
Before the Zimbabwean
minister of health gave his speech, he was asked to think up an anti-malaria
slogan. The minister duly stood up, raised his fist and shouted "Down
with the MDC" and then "Down with Mosquitoes". As someone
who has followed Zimbabwean politics for a while, I shouldn’t have been
surprised, but I was.
In Zimbabwe, almost
everything is politicised. People are denied access to food if they cannot
produce a ZANU PF party card. Worse still, they are frequently beaten,
tortured and raped for supporting the opposition MDC. Politicising malaria
control in such a blatant way marks a new low for Mugabe’s government.
Zimbabwe always had an excellent malaria control programme, but in the
past few years it has all but disintegrated. Starved of funds due to the
economic chaos caused by Mugabe’s disastrous policies, along with the
fact that public funds have been diverted to Mugabe’s hated secret police,
the Central Intelligence Organisation, most of the anti-malaria personnel
have left.
Last year, the malaria
control programme only managed to protect 3.4 per cent of households from
malaria because they did not even have petrol to drive out to the malaria
areas.
Some of the malaria
control staff are simply trying to do their job under very trying circumstances,
but the politicisation of healthcare by the country’s leadership hampers
their work at every turn. More worrying is the fact that various UN bodies
as well as aid agencies appear to be endorsing and legitimising this political
abuse by standing shoulder to shoulder with the ZANU PF leadership. This
should stop immediately. The only way for the long-term health of Zimbabwe’s
people to improve is to ensure peace, democracy and economic growth. That
will not and cannot happen under Mugabe’s government and the UN should
come out and say so.
*Richard Tren is
a director of the South Africa-based health advocacy group Africa Fighting
Malaria.
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