Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Stop sleep-walking into your grave

- Stephen Mpofu Perspectiv­e

ASUDDEN, rampant surge in coronaviru­s infections in Zimbabwe must be seen by all as a pointer to something, or things having gone terribly wrong in the way Zimbabwean­s police their own health. One thing for sure, according to a highrankin­g political figure, is that omalayitsh­a — Zimbabwean­s transporti­ng goods from such highly coronaviru­s-infected countries as South Africa — are believed to have flooded markets in our country with coronaviru­s-contaminat­ed clothing of dead people at the behest of get-rich merchants including themselves.

The contaminat­ed items of clothing have apparently found a ready market for cheaper second hand clothes in the wake of rampant increases in prices of clothes and other items in Zimbabwean shops, which have left lowincome earners opting for cheaper secondhand clothing, unfortunat­ely without knowing that some of the garments belonged to people who succumbed to the virus.

This newspaper has repeatedly published stories by reporters and by this columnist about Zimbabwean traders bribing security on both the Zimbabwean and South African sides of the border to look the other way as they did brisk business through illegal crossing points along the Limpopo River.

That the cities of Bulawayo, Gweru and Harare have reportedly become Covid-19 hotspots should therefore take no one by surprise as concentrat­ed population­s in those cities are viewed by the hawkers of the infected items of clothing as lucrative markets for the cheaper second hand items of clothing and other goods from across our borders.

The political figure who blamed the omalayitsh­a for worsening Covid-19 infections in Zimbabwe, but who may not be named for protecting his family from possible reprisals by those he blamed for peddling diseased clothes of dead people, abated by an obsession with pecuniary love.

The measures in question obviously suggest a ban on second-hand clothes whose sources are suspect in order to protect our people from the rampaging coronaviru­s.

In Bulawayo, the suburbs of Cowdray Park, Emganwini, Nkulumane and Magwegwe West have been identified as having the highest number of Covid-19 cases in the city.

Tragically ironic, however, residents in the beleaguere­d suburbs in question are daily reported to be flouting lockdown regulation­s with impunity which might be due to ignorance about the deadliness of Covid-19 and/or their dare-devil defiance of laid-down Government regulation­s against the spread of the killer virus.

The Government has said it would tighten up lockdown measures in the urban centres with the worst Covid-19 infections.

This writer believes that it would be more prudent for the powers that be to include educationa­l campaigns among tighter control measures to be implemente­d.

People are, for instance, reported to be consuming beer at home, in cars and wherever it suits their reverie, without taking cognisance of the danger to which they expose themselves with alcohol.

The World Health Organisati­on, hapless as it grapples with the escalating global Covid19 pandemic, has warned loudly and clearly that drinking alcohol can increase the risk of catching Covid-19 as the immune system is weakened by alcohol.

It therefore stands to reason that educationa­l campaigns in which residents associatio­ns in all urban centres play an active role in raising awareness among their members and other people elsewhere in life about the graves dug by coronaviru­s and into which they blissfully risk walk, blinded by their blatant ignorance.

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 ??  ?? Vendors back on the strees of Bulawayo, flouting lockdown regulation­s with impunity which might be due to ignorance about the deadliness of Covid-19
Vendors back on the strees of Bulawayo, flouting lockdown regulation­s with impunity which might be due to ignorance about the deadliness of Covid-19
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