The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Border jumpers, escapees pose serious danger

- ◆ chinhemaru­va@gmail.com African Agenda Ruth Butaumocho

REPORTS that hundreds of people have escaped quarantine centres are both disturbing and disappoint­ing, looking at the progress Zimbabwe in managing the coronaviru­s pandemic in the last few months.

By Tuesday this week, 120 people had escaped from Covid-19 quarantine centres in the country, posing a serious danger to millions of people under lockdown, as part of a litany of measures that Government put in place to stop the further spread of the virus.

In the last few months, Zimbabwe has been receiving returning residents, who were living in different countries across the globe, including from those countries that are hotspots, after the pandemic rendered the majority of them jobless.

Forced with prospects of abject poverty and destitutio­n, the majority of them are trickling back home as life in their adopted countries is increasing­ly becoming difficult.

Once they arrive, the law prescribes that all returning residents be subjected to screening and testing, including 21-day mandatory quarantine.

Those who would have been quarantine­d are also subject to tests on day eight in quarantine and upon the completion of the mandatory three-week isolation centre.

However, it is disappoint­ing that the returnees who are coming from different countries hounded by Covid19 at the benevolenc­e of the State by virtue that they are Zimbabwean­s, are brazenly ignoring measures in place, by escaping well before the stipulated time.

Even the manner they are escaping is highly suspicious and calls for urgent investigat­ions into the issues to establish how groups of people could have made good escape without those on guard, noticing any anomaly.

Recently, 18 returnees escaped a quarantine facility at Mkoba . Teachers College in Gweru, leaving many baffled, considerin­g that security was tight at the place.

Through his micro- blogging account on Twitter, the Ministry of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services permanent secretary Mr Nick Mangwana wondered how the returnees made good their escape from the facility, which had a long security fence.

“18 returnees are missing at Mkoba Teachers College Quarantine Centre in Gweru. These are 15 men, three women and a small baby. There is a 2 metre wall and a razor wire? Bribed gate security?” Mr Mangwana queried.

It is equally sad that when they escape, the returnees are welcomed and harboured by relatives and friends, fully aware of the danger they pose to neighbouri­ng communitie­s and society at large.

Already the country is faced with a magnanimou­s possibilit­y that hundreds are already trickling in the country through illegal entry points, further increasing the risk of new infections, which will take long to detect, once they interact with different communitie­s.

Although the busy border was officially closed in March, hordes of malfeasanc­e continue to trickle back, using illegal entry points into the country, disregardi­ng standing laws on returnees.

Far from being our own brothers and sisters, returnees breaching legal provisions and those housing them should be brought to book for such irresponsi­ble behaviour.

Not only is their behaviour an albatross towards the country’s fight against the pandemic, but their actions are dangerous and bent on further spreading the disease because a large proportion of the Covid-19 positive cases that the country has today are imported.

That developmen­t points to a sad and unfortunat­e scenario, where these border jumpers and escapees are infected people undetected, as they gallivant up and about.

It is now incumbent on the Government to come up with robust and deterrent measures for those caught violating the standing laws, beyond the current fine.

We really need tougher punishment­s that are commensura­te with the gravity of the crime of violating self-isolation and mandatory quarantine measures if the nation is to survive this pandemic.

The severity of the punishment should also be extended to the law enforcemen­t agents, amid growing suspicions that some of them could have been working in cahoots with the returnees to facilitate their escape.

Health officials might need to consider issuing of certificat­es to returnees once they complete the mandatory quarantine period.

While there might be outcry over possible stigmatisa­tion over such move, the possible catastroph­e that Covid-19 poses to the generality of the society, can never be equated to public disapprova­l.

Proper policing and monitoring of those mandated to guard quarantine centres should be tightened so that every activity and everyone is accounted for.

The nation is revered among countries that have alert policing measures and personnel on law enforcemen­t in the region, it therefore boggles the mind, why the same should be overwhelme­d in superinten­ding over the management mere quarantine centres with seemingly vulnerable citizens.

The nation should not lose sleep over illegal entries of returnees because these can be nabbed once law enforcemen­t agents increase their surveillan­ce in borders because the entry points are historical and already known.

The consequenc­es of upsurge of Covid-19 cases are too huge to contemplat­e, that’s why the Government will need to decisively deal and severely punish escapees from quarantine centres, who are raising frivolous complaints to justify their actions.

Their actions pose a serious human threat which could turn this country into a Covid-19 hotspot in the region, reversing the positive gains made to date.

Returnees should abandon their sense of entitlemen­t attitude and renegade behaviour and work towards assisting the nation in curbing the further spread of the virus.

Every Zimbabwean has a mandate to respond decisively, innovative­ly and together to suppress to spread of the virus, while looking at ways to address the socio-economic devastatio­n that Covid-19 will cause in the long term.

 ??  ?? There is need to improve security along the borders and at quarantine centres
There is need to improve security along the borders and at quarantine centres
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