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Southern Africa caught in COVID-19 surge

The coronaviru­s pandemic has struck southern Africa harder than any other region on the continent. DW looks at stories from South Africa to Tanzania that shed light on how different countries are battling the disease.

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Southern Africa welcomed news on Thursday that the African Union (AU) had secured an additional 400 million doses of coronaviru­s vaccines for its member states. South Africa is set to receive its first dose of the AstraZenec­a vaccine on Monday after approving it for emergency use. However, there is still little cause for celebratio­n as the region's healthcare systems begin to wilt under the strain of the second wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The devastatin­g reality of the pandemic is playing out differentl­y in these five southern African countries.

South Africa: Busting vaccine myths

The South African government says it is expecting the first consignmen­t of one million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine from the Serum Institute of India on February 1. It's good news for the country, which has the highest number of officially recorded COVID-19 cases and deaths on the continent and is also currently dealing with a new, more infectious variant of the virus.

Frontline healthcare workers are expected to be given first priority.

"We are still on course because the issue was to target in January and we haven't got any reason to worry about that change," Health Minister Zweli Mkhize said.

But the rise in myths con

cerning the much-anticipate­d roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccine is increasing­ly becoming a headache for authoritie­s. One popular new conspiracy theory claims that the vaccines will be used to trace people through the 5G mobile network.

"It's really an issue of educating people as to why vaccines are probably our only way out," says Shabir Madhi, a professor of vaccinolog­y at the University of Witwatersr­and in Johannesbu­rg.

These myths, which are primarily spread via social media, seem to be gaining more followers every day. South African resident Davie Mashudu says he no longer trusts the vaccine is safe. "To me I don't think the vaccine should be made compulsory for COVID-19," he told DW. "I won't take the vaccine."

Meanwhile, President Cyril Ramaphosa has urged government officials to do whatever they can to dispel the myths and conspiracy theories before the vaccine is rolled-out around the country.

"[We need to ensure] that we speak accurately and clearly, basing our pronouncem­ents on facts and if it is [to do with] medical issues, on science and med

ical evidence," he said.

South Africa aims to vaccinate 67% of its population, or about 40 million people, by the end of 2021.

Zimbabwe: Grave diggers kept busy

Until December 2020, Zimbabwe managed to keep official COVID-19 cases relatively low.

However, over the past three weeks coronaviru­s-related deaths have climbed to an average of 50 per day. Four serving cabinet ministers and several high-ranking politician­s have died of COVID-19 during the spike, prompting a tighter lockdown. Zimbabwe has now officially recorded 31,320 COVID-19 cases and more than 1,000 deaths.

At Zororo Memorial Park, a cemetery on the outskirts of the capital Harare, mourners can only watch from a distance as undertaker­s lower loved ones into the ground.

"Times are hard and I am extremely worried," Titus Chimombe, a relative of one of the deceased told DW. "I have just lost a beloved relative. The times we are in are full of fear, anxiety and desperatio­n."

Grave diggers have been kept busy at the cemetery. Kudakwashe Gokondo, the cemetery's manager, says burial numbers are beginning to overwhelm his staff.

"Previously at this cemetery, we used to conduct a maximum of five to six burials per day," he told DW. "This would have been considered high. Now the number has risen to more than 20 burials per day."

After four ministers in President Emmerson Mnangagwa's cabinet succumed to the virus, the president quickly promised a vaccine roll-out across the country.

But ordinary Zimbabwean­s like Titus Chimombe are skeptical of the state's ability to successful­ly pull off a massvaccin­ation program.

"I am not sure if the current government's response can rise to meet this deadly pandemic," he told DW. "The public health system seems like it is not prepared. As we speak right now, there is minimal testing being done for COVID-19."

Zambia: Desperate citzens resort to self-medication

Zambia's University Teaching Hospital (UTH) — the country's biggest referral hospital — treats hundreds of patients daily. But according to Chitalu Chilufya, a physician and former health minister, the increasing number of dead-on-arrival cases being reported in recent months may be related to the rise in people self-medicating against COVID-19. He said many Zambians are taking drugs developed for other diseases, or are resorting to "various herbal concoction­s."

"We have noted abuse of antibiotic­s and hydroxychl­oroquine among the public and we've

even seen an escalation in the prices of certain drugs that are rumored to be effective against COVID-19," he told DW.

25-year old Onechi Kasolo survived a COVID-19 infection. But his attempts to self-medicate against the virus left him on a ventilator in the intensive care unit for a week.

"I never imagined I would be on oxygen in the ICU isolation ward on New Year's Eve," he told DW. "It was a terrible experience. Really terrifying."

But laboratory technician Siphiwe Mwanza's brother was not so lucky. He died aged just 40 following COVID-19 complicati­ons and attempts to self-medicate.

"I had seen worse and they had pulled through, so I did not think my brother was going to die," she told DW.

Health officials have called on citizens to seek early medical attention if they are suffering from symptoms.

"As you self-medicate you are losing time," says Chilufya. "We will have challenges resuscitat­ing patients daily, 10-to-15 new admissions now require oxygen."

Zambia has recorded over 48,000 cases of COVID-19 with almost 700 deaths. Over 200 people are currently on ventilator­s across the country.

Malawians resort to crowd

funding PPE equipment

At Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and oxygen are in short supply. It's a familiar scene at many of Malawi's hospitals.

With government-provided resources severely limited, concerned individual­s like Onjezani Kenani, a Malawi citizen based in the UK, have started organizing online fundraiser­s to provide hospitals with desperatel­yneeded equipment.

Kenani is the lead organizer of the group "Covid Response Private Citizens." So far, by sharing his GoFundMe site over social media platforms including Facebook and WhatsApp, he has managed to raise over €8,000 ($9,710).

However, Justice Minister Titus Mvalo has called on private individual­s raising COVID-19 relief funds to work closely with the government to prevent fraud.

"We appeal to internatio­nal donors to assist with resources and work collective­ly with appropriat­e authoritie­s with any resources that are raised," he said.

Over 550 Malawians, including two cabinet ministers, have died from complicati­ons related to COVID-19.

Tanzanian president remains defiant in COVID-19 denial

In contrast to his sub-Saharan counterpar­ts, Tanzanian president John Magufuli has continued to push back against the global medical consensus of the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Wednesday, he claimed — without offering evidence — that vaccines may be part of a foreign plot to spread illness and steal Africa's wealth. Magufuli has also branded COVID-19 vaccines as dangerous and unnecessar­y, instead urging people to trust in God and rely on alternativ­e remedies such as inhaling steam.

"We in Tanzania have managed to stay for a year without corona," he said during a speech. "Even here, no one has put on a mask. Our God is beyond Satan and Satan will always fail using different diseases."

His government has not published national coronaviru­s data since mid-2020, which puts the current total number of confirmed cases at 509, with 21 deaths.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has urged Tanzania to listen to the science, with the WHO's Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, tweeting a thinly veiled message to Tanzanian authoritie­s.

 ??  ?? Though southern African nations initially maintained low coronaviru­s infection rates the trend in some has turned grim
Though southern African nations initially maintained low coronaviru­s infection rates the trend in some has turned grim
 ??  ?? South Africa has suffered significan­tly more COVID-19-related deaths than any other African country
South Africa has suffered significan­tly more COVID-19-related deaths than any other African country

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