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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Zim
begs for aid: Govnt forced to declare national emergency
Daily
Mail
December 04, 2008
Zimbabwe has declared a state of emergency today after finally admitting
that the cholera outbreak which has claimed hundreds of lives in
the impoverished country is out of control.
Health Minister
David Parirenyatwa has appealed to aid agencies for drugs, food,
equipment and money to pay doctors and nurses at hospitals, the
state-run Herald newspaper said, adding that Zimbabwe's main hospitals
are 'literally not functioning'.
With the latest
death toll from cholera at 565 and the UN reporting that up to 12,500
people have been infected, the deputy minister for water revealed
he only has water treatment chemicals to last for 12 weeks.
'I am appealing
for at least 40 million rand ($3.89 million) to purchase chemicals
and that money is needed between now and next Monday,' he said.
The government
has also appealed for $450million in aid to deal with food shortages.
Yesterday the
situation threatened to spiral into violence as riot police charged
protesting doctors, nurses and union members with batons.
At least one
hundred desperate doctors and nurses protested outside the health
ministry in the capital of Harare.
Zimbabwean trade
unions have also called a day of protest over a deepening banking
and cash shortage crisis.
The latest death
toll from the disease was put at 565, with the UN claiming that
up to 12,546 people were suspected of being infected.
Under normal
circumstances, cholera is both preventable and treatable - but in
Zimbabwe, with electricity shut off on a regular basis and Harare
running out of clean water, the situation is spiralling.
Now even the
Limpopo River, bordering South Africa, is infected, the BBC has
reported.
This week, as
children played near cesspools, their parents shook their heads
at a public service announcement drifting over the radio: It urged
people to boil water before drinking it.
It sounded like
a taunt in the country where water and electricity are cut off far
more than they are on.
Authorities
turned off the taps in Zimbabwe's capital again this week because
they had run out of purifying chemicals in the midst of the killer
epidemic. The water was turned on in Harare again today.
The crisis is
the latest chapter in the collapse of this once-vibrant nation.
President Robert Mugabe, who has ruled for 28 years, has refused
to leave office even though he and his party lost elections in March.
An agreement
to form a unity government with the opposition has been deadlocked
for weeks over how to share Cabinet posts.
In the township
of Mabvuku, where residents have dug shallow wells in open ground,
people say they know that not boiling the water can make them sick,
but they have no choice. There is no electricity, and wood, charcoal
or other fuel to build fires is scarce and so expensive it is out
of reach for most people.
"We are
afraid, but there is no solution. Most of the time the electricity
is not available so we just use the water," one resident, Naison
Chakwicha, said.
In the western
Harare suburb of Mbare, Anna Marimbe said she had traced the deaths
last week of two neighbour children to the stinking open drains
where they used to play.
Residents of
Chitungwiza, a densely populated township 15 miles (24 kilometres)
south of Harare, sued the National Water Authority last week, saying
they had been without running water for 13 months, causing an outbreak
of cholera and leading to deaths.
The lawsuit
filed with the High Court describes "large pools of raw sewage"
in the streets of the town of 500,000, where the first cholera cases
were reported in August.
Like most of
Zimbabwe's main cities and towns, Chitungwiza once had functioning
sewage and water delivery systems, but authorities have made no
repairs for years.
Harare is the
epicentre of the cholera epidemic, which has spread across the country.
Controlling the disease depends on providing clean water, which
means repairing broken water and sewage pipes as well as dilapidated
pumping and purification equipment.
And the collapse
of all services, including refuse collection, has turned the city
into a playground for rats that threaten to spread other more deadly
diseases.
The government
has reported 473 cholera deaths since August and a total of 11,700
people infected as of Monday, according to Paul Garwood, spokesman
for Health Action and Crises, the humanitarian arm of the U.N. World
Health Organization.
Garwood said
that according to the official toll, four per cent of people are
dying of a disease that usually claims fewer than one per cent of
those infected and is easily treated with rehydration salts or an
intravenous drip.
Doctors say
the death toll is nearer 1,000, or 10 per cent of victims, because
many of those afflicted with cholera die at home or in the countryside
without medical care.
All the country's
main public hospitals have closed and those that continue to operate
have little or no medicine and suffer from a shortage of staff,
whose monthly salaries do not cover even one day's bus fare to get
to work.
Costly private
clinics, which accept only foreign currency, are out of reach for
the vast majority of the population.
The opposition-controlled
Harare City Council is burying cholera victims for free because
people cannot afford to buy graves.
Zimbabwe's government,
normally hostile to international aid agencies, is welcoming an
initiative by several - including UNICEF, WHO and Doctors Without
Borders - to provide emergency care and try to ensure safe water
supplies.
Health officials,
following the line of a government that has refused to declare a
national emergency, insisted the cholera outbreak was under control
until five days ago. The best advice Health Minister David Parirenyatwa
could offer was to urge people to stop shaking hands.
"I want
to stress the issue of shaking hands. Although it's part of our
tradition to shake hands, it's high time people stopped shaking
hands," he told state-run daily, The Herald.
Still, Zimbabweans
continue to find ways to deal with the crisis.
Those who can
afford it are digging wells and bore holes. Others are buying tanks
and pumps to install on their roof or yards, then paying $50 in
foreign currency for a single delivery of 500 gallons (1,900 litres)
of water.
Most vendors
in Zimbabwe only accept U.S. dollars or South African rand since
the Zimbabwe dollar, once on a par with the greenback, devalues
with each passing hour.
Yesterday, it
was trading for 1.8 million to the dollar - even after the Central
Bank dropped 10 zeros from the local currency this year in an attempt
to keep up with inflation last set officially at 231 million per
cent in July.
The economic
collapse of what was once a regional bread basket followed Mugabe's
often-violent campaign, beginning in 2000, to seize white-owned
farms and hand them over to veterans of his guerrilla war against
white minority rule.
Now, even those
who have the money often can't buy water. One supplier said yesterday
that he has a waiting list more than two weeks long.
Those without
foreign currency must turn to "water Samaritans" - residents
of Harare's wealthier neighbourhoods who have wells or bore holes
and are allowing people to fill buckets and jerry cans for free.
Some residents are charging for the privilege.
Lines of mainly
women and children gather daily outside the homes of people with
wells. But even that supply is not assured.
Parirenyatwa,
the health minister, voiced the fears of many when he said the cholera
epidemic is likely to only get worse with the onset of the rainy
season, which began last month and brings the heaviest rains in
late December and January.
"What I
am afraid of is that now that the rainy season has come, all the
feces lying in the bushes will be washed into shallow wells and
contaminate the water," he said.
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