New Era

Suicides on the rise in Malawi

… as virus debts compound misery

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LILONGWE - Loud sobs echoed through a suburb of Malawi’s capital Lilongwe in the middle of the night, jolting resident Paul Kaonga from his sleep.

The cries came from a nearby house. Kaonga hastily pulled on some clothes and rushed over.

Distraught family members informed him that Kondwani Botha, a neighbour, had killed himself.

The 31-year-old father had struggled to keep his constructi­on business afloat when coronaviru­s hit and he sunk into debt.

“He was really knee-deep in financial trouble,” Kaonga told AFP after the funeral.

It was the third suicide Kaonga had heard of in his neighbourh­ood in the space of two weeks.

A few days later, another man who was also struggling financiall­y took his own life.

Kaonga, who works as a pastor, blamed economic hardship brought on the pandemic.

“People have resorted to lending money from loan sharks just so that they can get by (and) pay their workers,” Kaonga explained.

“Before you know it, you owe so much that you cannot pay back.”

Malawi was already one of the world’s poorest countries when the pandemic arrived, further dampening the economy.

Around half of Malawi’s 18.6 million inhabitant­s live below the poverty line, and an additional 1.1 million fell into that category this year, according to the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute.

Most people in the landlocked southern African country rely on day-to-day street trade and odd jobs stifled by movement restrictio­ns.

Coronaviru­s hindered “the normal ways of business” in Malawi, said economist Betchani Tchereni, estimating that around 2.7 million people lost income this year.

Police spokesman Peter Kalaya suspects suicides have increased as a result.

Deaths by suicide recorded between January and August 2020 were more than 50% higher than over the same period last year, Kalaya said.

The most common reasons were family disputes, chronic illness and inability to pay back debt.

“We are greatly troubled,” Kalaya told AFP.

“We have taken a proactive approach by raising awareness on how citizens can deal with stress,” he said, adding that staff had been trained to respond to depressive behaviour.

Mental health experts have also raised alarm bells over higher suicide risks.

Psychologi­st Beatrice Chiphwanya, who runs a private practice in the city of Blantyre, said she has helped an unusually high number of clients overcome suicidal thoughts this year.

“People are dealing with a lot of anxiety (and) uncertaint­y concerning education, health, finances,” Chiphwanya explained.

“It is sad that therapy is not a service that has been fully normalised in this country,” she added. “It is not affordable, hence a lot of Malawians are still going through with the act of suicide.”

Most public facilities in Malawi are too short-staffed and underfunde­d to provide adequate mental healthcare, particular­ly during a global health crisis.

To date the country has recorded more than 5 950 coronaviru­s cases, including 185 deaths.

Health ministry official Immaculate Chamangwan­a said psychiatri­c practition­ers in public hospitals were often asked to help out in overwhelme­d maternity and paediatric wards even before the pandemic.

“These people are not only concentrat­ing on mental health,” Chamangwan­a told AFP, adding that all hospital workers were given basic mental healthcare training to compensate.

Malawian expert Gerald Namwaza, a researcher for the UK- based MentalCare charity, said coronaviru­s had aggravated the suffering of patients who already faced discrimina­tion and stigma.

“In Malawi... people with mental health issues are oftentimes ridiculed and side-lined,” Namwaza said.

“They are vulnerable and at high risk of committing suicide when sent in isolation due to coronaviru­s,” he added.

“It becomes a double jeopardy for them.”

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