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ZIMBABWE:
Lepers struggle to cope in worsening economic crisis
IRIN
News
March 16, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52202
HARARE - Life
is never easy for people afflicted by leprosy, but Zimbabwe's fast
deteriorating socioeconomic conditions have made it even more challenging.
At the Mutemwa Leprosy Settlement in Zimbabwe's northeastern Mutoko
communal lands, 90 km east of the capital, Harare, the patients
are desperately in need of food, clothing and financial assistance
as the centre's coffers are empty. The centre also urgently needs
money for bedding, repairs and maintenance of the facilities.
Auxillia Chiviya, an official at the settlement, which was founded
in 1937, told IRIN the situation could become disastrous if no solution
to the centre's financial problems was found within the next month.
The already critical situation at the settlement has been worsened
by the current economic crisis in Zimbabwe. Basic commodities such
as fuel, food and medical supplies are scarce and galloping inflation,
currently at 782 percent, has made what little stocks are available
inaccessible to the poor.
Rodney Kasiyapfumbi, a patient at the settlement, said donations
that used to come in have dried up. Another patient, Nurse Kambarami,
said she had been surviving on a small helping of sadza (maize-meal
porridge) every day.
According to Chiviya, in the 1940s and 50s the settlement grew into
a huge leprosarium with nearly 1,000 patients. Later, with the advent
of the drug, Dapsone, which halts the disease, many patients were
sent back to their homes, where relatives could care for them.
Mutemwa Leprosy centre is home to 50 patients who have suffered
severe deformity and are disabled and destitute - some have lost
limbs and others have been blinded by the disease - who would otherwise
have no-one to care for them.
Despite the ongoing deprivation suffered by the patients as a result
of the harsh economic conditions in the country, the centre has
remained a haven for people affected by leprosy, as they often suffered
rejection by the broader populace.
"Some people do not want to share utensils with you ... [or] to
be close to you because you are a leper," said Kambarami.
Faith Chimanda, a supporter of the settlement, said many people
did not understand the disease. "Stigmatisation of people affected
by leprosy dates back to biblical times, where they were seen to
be cursed people," she commented. "In the current crisis in Zimbabwe
there is more need than ever to raise funds for the work to continue,
to supply basic needs and medical care for the patients."
Property stripping
from children in the context of HIV and AIDS requires urgent intervention
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