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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Doctors and Nurses strikes
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
doctors blame govt for cholera epidemic
Celean
Jacobson, Associated Press
November 19, 2008
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ggzbCDlG11qnaCTwUl0jhLEh-TnAD94I52K01
A group of doctors
said Wednesday that President Robert Mugabe's government is to blame
for a cholera epidemic sweeping Zimbabwe and that the disease's
spread there is being dramatically underreported.
About 160 people have
died of cholera in Zimbabwe in recent weeks, independent aid organizations
say. The lack of clean water and poorly maintained sewage systems
have allowed the waterborne intestinal disease to thrive.
And as the political
and economic crisis in Zimbabwe deepens, most hospitals have been
forced to close their doors as they can no longer afford drugs,
equipment or to pay their staff.
"This cholera
epidemic is manmade," Dr. Douglas Gwatidza, head of the Zimbabwean
Association of Doctors for Human Rights, said in a telephone
call with reporters.
He said government programs
to monitor disease outbreaks were in "disarray." Those
few health facilities still open were trying to stop the spread
of cholera but often at the expense of patients with other diseases.
Gwatidza also said dysentery
was becoming increasingly prevalent in a country already suffering
from one of the world's worst AIDS epidemics.
Comment from Zimbabwean
authorities was not immediately available Wednesday.
On Tuesday, riot police
prevented health workers in the capital, Harare, from protesting
against Zimbabwe's collapsing health care system.
Dr. Primrose Matambanadzo
said the government needed to issue an urgent appeal for assistance.
"There is a state
of crisis," she said. "We need things functioning at hospitals
now."
Aid groups fear the outbreaks
will worsen as the rainy season progresses and Medecins Sans Frontieres,
or Doctors Without Borders, has warned that 1.4 million people are
at risk.
The international
aid group World
Vision said Wednesday that 44 people had died in the Zimbabwean
border town of Beitbridge, including one of their staff members.
Beitbridge is one of
the regions busiest border crossings and there are concerns that
it is already spreading to other countries. South African authorities
have responded to the crisis with extra medical personnel and facilities
being set up along the border.
Local health officials
in Musina on the South African side of the border said two Zimbabweans
died of cholera after crossing into the country while 64 patients
were treated last weekend, the Star newspaper reported Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the South
African Press Association reported that a South African truck driver
who traveled from Zimbabwe has been admitted to a Durban hospital,
showing symptoms of cholera.
Zimbabwe once had among
the best health care systems in sub-Saharan Africa. But the country's
economic meltdown has led to chronic shortages of food and gasoline,
and daily outages of power and water.
Mugabe, in power since
independence from Britain in 1980, blames Western sanctions for
his country's extreme financial woes. But critics point to corruption
and mismanagement under his increasingly autocratic leadership.
Hopes were raised
when Mugabe signed a power-sharing arrangement
with the opposition in September, but little progress has been made
toward setting up a unity government.
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