Arab Times

Virus haunts destitute living on the margins

‘Racist attacks’

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NEW YORK, April 9, (AP): In a housing complex in the Moroccan city of Sale, over 900 people live in crowded rooms without running water or an income to support them. While the North African country entered total lockdown in mid-March, self-isolation and social distancing are a luxury that families in this complex cannot afford.

Some families have lived in their room for 40 years, steadily filling it with children and grandchild­ren, with some rooms housing up to 10 people. Almost all are marginaliz­ed, and since the outbreak of COVID19, those who had jobs – such as working in gas stations or selling small items on the streets – have been left with no way to make a living.

Like countries around the world, Morocco is facing the challenge of how to protect population­s from the fastspread­ing virus while not punishing the poor.

In early March, the Moroccan government began rolling out measures to stem the spread of the virus, culminatin­g in the ongoing lockdown that has turned once bustling cities into ghost towns.

Borders, schools, shops, companies, cafes and mosques have closed. Movement between cities is restricted. Only one member of each household is permitted to leave in order to buy necessitie­s, and those who work in essential jobs must have government-approved permission slips to show at checkpoint­s or risk facing up to three months in prison.

Support

As the measures started to pinch vulnerable families, Morocco approved emergency support packages to people not registered in public or private sector jobs, ranging from $80 to $120. The fund supporting such measures was establishe­d by Moroccan King Mohamed VI, and saw mobilizati­on by institutio­ns, businesses and officials.

At the housing complex in Sale’s old medina, children hang around the communal courtyard and run through narrow alleyways. Families share one room where they wash clothes, and fill buckets of water at public fountains.

Volunteers from a local non-government­al organizati­on have stepped in to help, visiting the residence to disinfect surfaces, trying to prevent an outbreak of the virus in this crowded corner of Sale.

Resident Abdelkader Gourmai has limited mobility and depends on his wife, Halima, who usually works as a cleaner or sells vegetables in the medina, or market. Gourmai, 68, said when the lockdown began, the couple started buying groceries on credit, but now even that option has dried up.

Kaddour El Miny used to sell water to shoppers in the medina. A job that brought in very little before the COVID-19 lockdown has now stopped entirely.

Ilyas, 61, lives with eight family members. “My sons can’t find jobs. We’re not poor; we’re destitute,” he said. “We don’t rely on savings or a salary. If we don’t go out to work one day, then we go to sleep hungry.”

Women hang clothes to dry in hallways and on walls, their belongings and hands touching the same surfaces.

Warda, a mother of three, knows the risks, but sees no alternativ­e. “I am scared for my children. I have to lock them indoors and stay with them, but how am I supposed to feed them?”

Teams of volunteers in hazmat suits from Mohamed El Gaid’s aid group Shabab el Mowatana have been visiting slums and densely populated buildings like this one to help clean. Local authoritie­s supplied a room near a mosque where volunteers gather, store equipment and get water.

“We had to take the initiative and try to complement the government effort,” El Gaid said. “Every effort is necessary.”

“We’re all from Sale and want to make a difference,” he added.

As the volunteers walk up through the tiny stairs of the complex, they’re received with relief and gratitude. People pray out loud for the workers as they disinfect walls and floors.

Residents hope that this will be enough to save them from a contagion they can’t risk facing.

Meanwhile, Taiwan’s foreign ministry on Thursday strongly protested accusation­s from the head of the World Health Organizati­on that it condoned racist personal attacks on him that he alleged were coming from the self-governing island democracy.

Remarks

The ministry expressed “strong dissatisfa­ction and a high degree of regret” at WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s’ remarks at a press briefing Wednesday. It requested he “immediatel­y correct his unfounded allegation­s, immediatel­y clarify, and apologize to our country.”

Taiwan’s 23 million people have themselves been “severely discrimina­ted against” by the politics of the internatio­nal health system and “condemn all forms of discrimina­tion and injustice,” the statement said.

Taiwan is a “mature, highly sophistica­ted nation and could never instigate personal attacks on the director-general of the WHO, much less express racist sentiments,” it said.

At the press briefing in Geneva, Tedros vocally defended himself and the UN health agency’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He accused Taiwan’s foreign ministry of being linked to a months-long campaign against him and said that since the emergence of the new coronaviru­s, he has been personally attacked, including receiving at times, death threats and racist abuse.

“This attack came from Taiwan,” said Tedros, who is a former Ethiopian health and foreign minister and the WHO’s first African leader.

He said Taiwanese diplomats were aware of the attacks but did not dissociate themselves from them. “They even started criticizin­g me in the middle of all those insults and slurs,” Tedros said. “I say it today because it’s enough.” The basis of his allegation­s were unclear.

Tedros was elected with the strong support of China, one of five permanent veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council and which claims Taiwan as its own territory. He has firmly backed Beijing’s claims to have been open and transparen­t about the outbreak, despite strong evidence that it suppressed early reports on infections, while echoing its criticisms of the US.

At China’s insistence, Taiwan has been barred from the UN and the WHO and even stripped of its observer status at the annual World Health Assembly. At the same time, it has one of the most robust public health systems in the world, and has won praise for its handling of the virus outbreak.

 ??  ?? Mohamed VI
Mohamed VI

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