The Standard (St. Catharines)

Africa faces an ‘existentia­l threat’

COVID-19 cases set to spike across continent ill-equipped to fight virus

- CARA ANNA

JOHANNESBU­RG—Some African countries will have more than 10,000 coronaviru­s cases by the end of April, health officials projected Thursday, as the continent least equipped to treat serious infections has an “enormous gap” in the number of ventilator­s and other critical items.

While cases across Africa are now above 6,000 at what has been called the dawn of the outbreak, the continent is “very, very close” to where Europe was after a 40-day period, the head of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. John Nkengasong, told reporters.

The virus “is an existentia­l threat to our continent,” he said. All but four of Africa’s 54 countries have cases after Malawi on Thursday reported its first, and local transmissi­on has begun in many places.

Nkengasong said authoritie­s are “aggressive­ly” looking into procuring equipment such as ventilator­s that most African countries desperatel­y need, and local manufactur­ing and repurposin­g are being explored.

“We’ve seen a lot of goodwill expressed to supporting Africa from bilateral and multilater­al partners,” but “we still have to see that translate into concrete action,” he said.

The World Health Organizati­on doesn’t know how many ventilator­s are available across Africa to help those in respirator­y distress, regional director Dr. Matshidiso Moeti told reporters. “We are trying to find out this informatio­n from country-based colleagues . ... What we can say without a doubt is there is an enormous gap.”

Some countries have only a few ventilator­s. Central African Republic has just three. A small percentage of people who are infected will need ventilator­s and about 15 per cent may need intensive care, said Dr. Zabulon Yoti, a WHO official.

The health officials pleaded for global solidarity at a time when even some of the world’s richest countries are scrambling for basic medical needs, including face masks.

“Countries like Cameroon just reached out yesterday, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, asking, ‘Look, we need tents because we’re running out of hospital beds already,’” Nkengasong said.

Even if equipment is obtained, getting them to countries is a growing challenge with Africa’s widespread travel restrictio­ns, though countries have made exceptions for cargo or emergency humanitari­an flights.

Simply gauging the number of coronaviru­s cases in Africa is a challenge, even in South Africa, the most developed country on the continent, where authoritie­s have acknowledg­ed a testing backlog.

Other countries suffer from the widespread shortage of testing kits or swabs, though 43 countries in the WHO Africa sub-Saharan region now have testing capability, up from two in early February.

As more African countries impose lockdowns, both the WHO and Africa CDC expressed concern for the millions of low-income people who need to go out daily to earn their living.

The lockdowns are causing unease. Police herded several hundred homeless people into a stadium in South Africa’s capital, Pretoria, where tents were erected for shelter and methadone was provided for many.

The first sub-Saharan African nation to impose a lockdown, Rwanda, has now extended it by two weeks, a sign of what might be to come for other nations. Botswana imposed its own, effective Friday.

 ?? JEROME DELAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Homeless people are seen at the Caledonian Stadium in downtown Pretoria, South Africa, on Thursday after being rounded up by police in an effort to enforce a 21-day lockdown.
JEROME DELAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Homeless people are seen at the Caledonian Stadium in downtown Pretoria, South Africa, on Thursday after being rounded up by police in an effort to enforce a 21-day lockdown.

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