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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Clean-up victims face death as they fail to access AIDS drugs -
report
ZimOnline
May 15, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=12098
HARARE - An
international medical aid organisation, Medecins Sans Frontieres
(MSF), says several victims of last year's controversial government
clean-up exercise in Epworth suburb in Harare could be facing imminent
death as they are failing to access life-prolonging drugs.
In its latest
report covering the period January to March this year, the MSF said
at least 10 percent of the 371 patients they had attended to at
Bellapaise Farm in Epworth, were in desperate need of anti-retroviral
drugs (ARVs).
"Unfortunately
there are no referral options anymore for these patients who require
ARVs because the waiting lists are full until the end of the year.
This is a serious concern; how many patients will survive until
the end of the year?"
"The high cost
to patients of CD4 counts (needed before starting ARV treatment)
is also a barrier to many; patients are currently being charged
between Z$3.6 million and 10 million for laboratory tests," says
the report.
The report says
most of the patients who are living in squalid conditions at the
farm will not survive until the end of the year. At least 600 people
are living on the farm after their houses and backyard shacks were
destroyed in a clean-up exercise defended by President Robert Mugabe
as necessary to rid cities and towns of squalor.
United Nations
special envoy Anna Tibaijuka said the clean-up exercise left at
700 000 people homeless and directly affected another 2.4 million
people in Zimbabwe.
Thousands of
HIV patients were also displaced during the clean-up exercise resulting
in most of them failing to access their life-prolonging AIDS drugs.
- ZimOnline
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