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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Activists
say cholera due to failed leadership
Ephraim Nsingo,
Inter Press Services (IPS)
October 16, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44295
"In my nine years
as a nurse, I have never been so devastated. You know how discouraging
it is to see people dying before your eyes. And you know very well
there is nothing you can do to help them." These were the words
of Caroline Chabuda*, a nurse at Seke North Clinic in Chitungwiza,
a satellite town about 30 km south of Harare. The clinic was recently
set aside to attend only to cholera cases following a local outbreak
of the disease a few months ago. But because of a shortage of key
medication, many patients admitted at the clinic have died.
Figures released by the
Ministry of Health indicate that 16 people died of cholera countrywide
in September. Chitungwiza residents, medical experts and human rights
activists believe the figure is much higher than that. They also
accuse the Ministry of Health and the Zimbabwe National Water Authority
(ZINWA) of ignoring the plight of residents.
"The government
and ZINWA are responsible for all this," said Tapiwa Muronzi
of St Mary's suburb in Chitungwiza, whose younger brother Carlos
died of cholera three weeks ago. Muronzi believes the government
has done too little, too late. "They are only acting now when
people are already dying," said a sobbing Muronzi. "We
all know that cholera, although it is a very dangerous disease,
can be prevented. The authorities neglected us when we needed them
most. Why wait until there are buried corpses? These people (government)
do not care about our plight. We have been without water for four
months now, but ZINWA continue to charge us exorbitant rates."
Muronzi's mother, Ambuya Clara Muronzi, 58, had no kind words for
staff at the clinic. "He could have survived, if they had given
him care. They neglected him, but now they are demanding lots of
money for doing nothing," she said.
But Chabuda
believes there is nothing they could have done to avert the situation.
"We have a great challenge of a shortage of experienced staff,
people who really know how to handle such cases. Cholera is not
like any other disease," said Chabuda. "Cholera is a very
sensitive and contagious disease. It needs to be handled by highly-qualified
medical personnel. Most of the nurses we have at the clinic are
still young and inexperienced. The youngsters are so ignorant. We
cannot risk patients' lives by letting them attend to (cholera victims)."
said Chabuda.
While Chabuda
was talking to this reporter, patients, mostly children, could be
seen writhing in agony on the floors. The few nurses who were present
appeared to be struggling to attend to them. Among other things,
the nurses gave them dehydration salts and aqua tablets, for use
in drinking water. "We do not have some key medicines; this
is what we can do under the circumstances," said another nurse,
who identified herself only as Caroline.
Cholera
linked to wider problems
With Chitungwiza
hosting this year's national commemorations of the Stand Up and
Speak Out Against Poverty Campaign, the wider failures that have
led to the outbreak will be brought to the fore. The Combined
Harare Residents Association (CHRA), which also covers Chitungwiza,
says some areas of the city have been without a reliable water supply
for years. In a statement, CHRA said: "The water and sewer
management problems have seen some residential areas going for years,
months and weeks without water and unattended sewer bursts respectively.
The shortage of water dictates that residents fetch water from unprotected
sources thus diseases like cholera breed easily. CHRA has so far
received countless cases of cholera and diarrhea." The organisation
says the authorities should "stop burying their heads in the
sand and attend to the governance stalemate as a matter of urgency".
Human rights
activists have lambasted the government for neglecting residents,
which they said is "criminal". "The government should
treat the health sector like they are doing agriculture," said
Itai Rusike, the director of the Community
Working Group on Health (CWGH) - a Harare based non-governmental
organization that pressures government on health issues. The government
has for the past two years been providing agricultural inputs free
of charge under the farm mechanisation programme. He added that
the government's official figures for cholera deaths were "very
under-represented".
Acknowledging that ZINWA has not maintained regular supplies of
potable water to Chitungwiza, spokesperson Tsungirirai Shoriwa,
said the company was not responsible for the outbreak of cholera
in Chitungwiza, saying the state-owned utility was doing the best
it can despite a shortage of necessary materials. "We do not
give people untreated water, it would be a crime for us to do so.
If we do not have the chemicals to treat water, we do not supply
the water. ZINWA has never advised people to boil wate,r because
according to us it is clean," said Shoriwa. He insisted ZINWA
was not supplying dirty water that had contributed to the outbreak
of cholera.
"It would be unfair
for people to blame ZINWA for the people who are dying of cholera
in Chitungwiza. As far as we are concerned, our water is clean.
You should be aware there are many factors that have contributed
to the spread of cholera such as the eating dirty food." ZINWA
took over water management in the urban centres from most local
authorities last year. This resulted in a chorus of complaints from
human rights activists and some politicians, who believe the government-run
company does not have the capacity to manage urban water.
The Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) and the Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human Rights have described the cholera outbreak
as an indication of "an unacceptable failure of leadership.
These wanton deaths (from cholera) are intolerable and shameful,
and the state's failure is merely a replication of other high level
failures, where the citizenry has now been disenfranchised of almost
all their basic human rights. If more than a dozen people have died
from cholera in just less than a month, we can only imagine how
many more are currently affected by, or at risk of contracting,
this avoidable disease," ZLHR said.
Thousands of residents,
and many others from surrounding areas will converge on the town
for the Stand Up and Take Action Against Poverty on Oct. 18. Issues
of sanitation and water supply in Chitungwiza and other urban areas
are set to take centre stage.
*Not her real name
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