Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

PANDEMIC APATHY has a last stand in Somalia.

Infections rising; tests, shots scarce

- HASSAN BARISE

MOGADISHU, Somalia — As richer countries race to distribute covid-19 vaccines, Somalia remains the rare place where much of the population hasn’t taken the coronaviru­s seriously. Some fear that’s proved to be deadlier than anyone knows.

“Certainly our people don’t use any form of protective measures, neither masks nor social distancing,” said Abdirizak Yusuf Hirabeh, the government’s covid-19 incident manager. “If you move around the city [of Mogadishu] or countrywid­e, nobody even talks about it.” And yet infections are rising, he said.

It is places like Somalia, the Horn of Africa nation torn apart by three decades of conflict, that will be last to see vaccines in any significan­t quantity. With part of the country still held by the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group, the risk of the virus becoming endemic in some hard-to-reach areas is strong — a fear for parts of Africa amid the slow arrival of vaccines.

“There is no real or practical investigat­ion into the matter,” said Hirabeh, who is also director of the Martini hospital in Mogadishu, the largest treating covid-19 patients, which saw seven new patients the day he spoke. He acknowledg­ed that neither facilities nor equipment in Somalia is adequate to tackle the virus.

Fewer than 27,000 virus tests have been conducted in a country of more than 15 million people, one of the lowest rates in the world. Fewer than 4,800 cases have been confirmed, including at least 130 deaths.

Some worry the virus will sink into the population as yet another poorly diagnosed but deadly fever.

For 45-year-old street beggar Hassan Mohamed Yusuf, that fear has turned into near-certainty. “In the beginning we saw this virus as just another form of the flu,” he said.

Then three of his young children died after having a cough and high fever. As residents of a makeshift camp for people displaced by conflict or drought, they had no access to coronaviru­s testing or proper care.

At the same time, Yusuf said, the virus hurt his efforts to find money to treat his family, as “we can’t get close enough” to people to beg.

Early in the pandemic, Somalia’s government did attempt some measures to limit the spread of the virus, closing schools and shutting down domestic and internatio­nal flights. Mobile phones rang with messages about the virus.

But social distancing has long disappeare­d in the country’s streets, markets and restaurant­s. On Thursday, some 30,000 people crammed into a stadium in Mogadishu for a regional football match with no face masks or other safety measures in sight.

Mosques in the Muslim nation never faced restrictio­ns for fear of the reactions.

“Our religion taught us hundreds of years ago that we should wash our hands, faces and even legs five times every day and our women should take face veils, as they’re often weaker. So that’s the whole prevention of the disease, if it really exists,” said Abdulkadir Sheikh Mohamud, an imam in Mogadishu.

“I left the matter to Allah to protect us,” said Ahmed Abdulle Ali, a shop owner in the capital. He attributed the rise in coughing during prayers to the changing of seasons.

A more important protective factor is the relative youth of Somalia’s people, said Dr. Abdurahman Abdullahi Abdi Bilaal, who works in a clinic in the capital. More than 80% of the country’s population is younger than 30.

“The virus is here, absolutely, but the resilience of people is owing to age,” he said.

It’s the lack of postmortem investigat­ions in the country that is allowing the true extent of the virus to go undetected, he said.

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