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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • Mobile clinic to benefit over 30 families
    The Herald (Zimbabwe)
    June 23, 2005

    http://www.herald.co.zw/index.php?id=44634&pubdate=2005-06-23

    THE Government has set up a mobile clinic at Caledonia Farm to provide health services to more than 30 families and some street children settled there following the demolition of illegal structures they were living in under Operation Restore Order.

    The setting up of the clinic comes hard on the heels of growing calls for the need of a health service provider by police details stationed at the farm.

    In an interview, the Deputy Minister of Health and Child Welfare, Dr Edwin Muguti, said his ministry had a duty to provide medical services to all those needing them.

    In a situation like the Caledonia one where different people suddenly found themselves settled in a place without medical services, he said the Government would naturally ensure that the services were made available.

    "There is nothing special about the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare coming in with a clinic in this instance because that it why we are there," he said.

    The mobile clinics, which will be ready to offer services as and when the need arose, which Dr Muguti estimated to be at least twice a week, would go on until Caledonia Farm was cleared of all the settlers.

    Caledonia is a temporary holding place for those awaiting relocation to other places.

    Because of the crowded conditions and lack of proper ablution facilities at the farm, there were fears of disease outbreaks.

    People at the farm hailed the Government’s move to provide a clinic, which offers medical services for free and has adequate drugs.

    An ambulance was even on standby to take care of any emergencies.

    Nurses from Harare and Parirenyatwa Hospitals man the clinic while a doctor makes periodical visits.

    Staff at the clinic said they were attending to at least 50 patients a day.

    In a recent interview with The Herald, the officer in charge at the farm, Inspector Eunice Gamuchirai Marange, had indicated that there was need to set up an emergency health service provider at the farm.

    She said she had received numerous complaints about cases of diarrhoea and colds from some people at the farm.

    Due to the absence of toilets at the farm during the initial phase, people at the farm had resorted to using nearby bushes, thereby exposing themselves to diseases.

    However, the farm now has mobile toilets while families that used to stay in the open are now living under the cover of tents donated by Christian Care.

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