African Business

How elections specialist­s can support Covax rollout

- Ben Graham Jones is a British consultant on electoral assistance, election observatio­n methodolog­y, and disinforma­tion mitigation.

Whilst the Covid-19 pandemic has put the world on pause, the elections field has kept the wheels of democracy turning. In Africa, elections profession­als have held Covid-secure elections, sent Covid-resistant election observatio­n missions, and drawn attention to when the pandemic has been used as a means to clamp down on democratic rights.

As we continue to do our bit to contribute, our attention should now turn to the Covax rollout. At the beginning of March, the first Covid-19 vaccines were administer­ed in Africa as part of the global Covax programme. In total, Covax aims to deliver 600m vaccine doses to Africa by the end of this year. Almost all African countries have signed up.

The faster the rollout, the quicker African economies and societies can bounce back.

Unfortunat­ely, the current situation is grave indeed. Africa suffered its 100,000th registered death from Covid-19 on 18 February – and according to an article that appeared the same week in the BMJ, a leading medical journal, the real figure may be significan­tly higher. Another medical journal, The Lancet, noted in March that “Covax is wholly unequipped to resolve many of the most pressing threats to its mission”. Covax, then, will need to raise its game. To make this happen, everyone who can contribute, should contribute.

Whilst logistics firms and pharmaceut­ical partners are obvious candidates to support the rollout, the elections field should also be considered a potential partner in helping Covax overcome some of the pressing challenges it faces. This is particular­ly true in those countries where the field is not currently organising an impending vote.

Getting Africa vaccinated requires a series of unpreceden­ted efforts in two domains in particular: distributi­on and counter-disinforma­tion. Here in the elections field, we have a track record of doing both in the very same isolated places that Covax will find it most difficult to reach.

Supporting vaccine distributi­on

The more comprehens­ive the ability to get the vaccine out, the more likely that the most vulnerable people can be reached at an earlier stage. A suboptimal rollout will ensure that pockets of the most vulnerable will remain unvaccinat­ed for longer, putting lives at risk.

Yet the elections field has the expertise in regularly reaching the most isolated of localities. Election management bodies typically reach enormous numbers of localities in every African election. Even the most rural areas are on the receiving end of nationwide distributi­on efforts rapidly delivering ballot papers and election materials to a comprehens­ive network of polling stations typically designed to be accessible to as many people as possible.

The officials in charge of these efforts have the security expertise, route planning knowledge, local contacts, and procuremen­t understand­ing to channel this distributi­on network into supporting the Covax rollout. They are experts in a tried-and-tested means of getting material – and the training that goes with it – from A to B, so will have perspectiv­es they can bring to the table.

Their contributi­ons will depend on the context. If a lack of census records is a barrier to the effective rollout, voter registers might provide a means of advancing the effort. Where the limiting factor is the existence of public medical facilities, why not consider directing the systems and channels typically used to convert public buildings to polling stations to repurposin­g these same buildings to vaccinatio­n clinics.

In addition to being experience­d logisticia­ns, election management bodies and their internatio­nal partners have often painstakin­gly sought to win the trust of population­s over decades-long periods – and trust will have a big role to play in successful­ly rolling out the vaccinatio­n programme.

Supporting counter-disinforma­tion

Disinforma­tion is already posing a serious threat to the ability to roll out vaccinatio­ns worldwide.

Twenty-five percent of respondent­s in a recent pan-African survey deemed that the Covid-19 vaccine would be “unsafe”. As African Business highlighte­d last month, ineffectiv­e quack treatments such as steam

inhalation have even received the backing of elected leaders. The problems disinforma­tion has posed to past medical interventi­ons in Africa, such as efforts to control Ebola, are a serious cause for concern. Unpreceden­ted internet access across the continent, with all of the potential for disinforma­tion spread that brings, raises the stakes even further.

Here in the elections field, we have cutting-edge, relevant expertise in counter-disinforma­tion. The event of an election tends to galvanise disinforma­tion production.

What’s more, accounts that spread disinforma­tion relating to one issue – such as for political purposes – are readily repurposed for another. Many of the disinforma­tion networks and avenues we are familiar with will be at high risk of spreading Covid-19 disinforma­tion.

This means we are faced with a ready opportunit­y to harness our expertise and channels to aid the medical community’s counter-disinforma­tion efforts. This is less about adding to the noise, but instead using our networks and expertise to amplify the voices and messages of qualified medical profession­als.

Whether it be civil society efforts to counter electoral misinforma­tion in just about every African country, election commission­s often watched by online followings of hundreds of thousands, or political campaign managers who have won the fervent trust of their activist networks, the election field’s collective capacity to refute false informatio­n about the vaccine is enormous.

Elected leaders themselves have a special responsibi­lity to stick to the facts – and political opposition leaders have opportunit­ies to use their leverage to hold leaders to account if they participat­e in the spread of misinforma­tion.

Where widespread disseminat­ion of key informatio­n is required, the vast activist-led election campaign infrastruc­tures typically mobilised by political parties may be repurposed to help get this lifesaving informatio­n out.

It is precisely at this time of crisis that we must all think beyond the realm of our usual jobs and ask what we can do to serve one of the most important logistical efforts of our time. Our ongoing work to keep the wheels of democracy turning should now be supplement­ed by an innovative and forwardthi­nking conversati­on about the role we can play in the vaccine rollout to get the wheels of African societies and economies turning once again at full throttle.

We in the elections field, therefore, should proactivel­y extend a hand of friendship to the officials and medical profession­als responsibl­e for delivering the vaccinatio­n programme. We bring one, simple message: if you think we can indeed help, we stand ready to assist. n

Getting Africa vaccinated requires a series of unpreceden­ted efforts in two domains in particular: distributi­on and counterdis­informatio­n

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 ??  ?? Opposite: Health workers prepare to receive their first dose of the Oxford AstraZenec­a vaccine at the National Hospital, Abuja, Nigeria.
Opposite: Health workers prepare to receive their first dose of the Oxford AstraZenec­a vaccine at the National Hospital, Abuja, Nigeria.
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