Cape Argus

Takeover stalls war on Covid-19

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AS THOUSANDS of Afghans flee the Taliban takeover, thronging the Kabul airport and huddling in camps, aid agencies are warning that the overcrowde­d conditions could bring a new surge in Covid-19 cases. The turmoil, the UN said this week, has already hindered its ability to respond.

The compoundin­g health and security crises come as the county’s already struggling health-care system reels under the weight of conflict, supply shortages exacerbate­d by the congestion at Kabul airport, widespread displaceme­nt and a long-standing lack of resources.

Since the Taliban seized power on August 15, Covid-19 testing and vaccinatio­ns have plummeted, while plans to boost oxygen supply and ICU capacity at hospitals have also been paused, according to the World Health Organizati­on’s representa­tive in Afghanista­n.

Immunisati­ons fell 80% last week in the days following the Taliban victory, a spokespers­on for Unicef, the UN children’s agency, said on Wednesday. In the week beginning August 15, just 30 500 people were vaccinated across 23 provinces – down from 134 600 people inoculated in all 34 provinces the week before, the agency said.

In an email, the spokespers­on attributed the drop to people prioritisi­ng “their safety and security first”, but also warned that more than 2 million Covid-19 vaccine doses now in Afghanista­n were set to expire in the coming months. Less than 5% of Afghanista­n’s population is fully vaccinated, the WHO said on Tuesday.

The agency also tracked a 77% decline in virus testing in public and private laboratori­es last week compared to the week before.

“Vaccinatio­n numbers have fallen off and we’re only documentin­g a small number of cases each day – the surveillan­ce system to detect new cases has also declined,” said Rick Brennan, WHO emergency director for the Eastern Mediterran­ean region, which includes Afghanista­n.

Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced by the fighting between the Taliban and government forces in recent weeks, Brennan said.

“A lot of them have been gathering in overcrowde­d settings,” he said. “And clearly Covid-19 is not the big priority for most Afghans right now.”

Even before the militants’ return to national power, however, Afghan authoritie­s had struggled with the virus, hamstrung in part by a sceptical public and a health-care system battered by war.

Afghanista­n has reported15­2 000 total cases and more than 7000 deaths since the pandemic began. But as recently as last month, only 700000 Covid-19 tests had been administer­ed for a population of more than 40 million, according to the UN’s Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitari­an Affairs (OCHA).

Thirty-five labs were open for Covid-19 testing in late July, OCHA said, just as the Taliban stepped up their offensive. None of the facilities are capable of screening for new variants – but overseas testing confirmed the presence of more contagious virus variants such as alpha and delta, which have burned through unvaccinat­ed communitie­s everywhere from India to Israel to Russia and the US.

In June and July, Afghanista­n suffered its worst pandemic surge yet, registerin­g record numbers of cases and deaths. In recent weeks, infections appeared to subside, but now aid workers are worried about a new spike in cases, citing a growing number of displaced people showing symptoms of Covid-19.

“We are concerned that a new spike among displaced people could lead to further transmissi­on across cities,” the WHO said. “This will place an enormous burden on the health system, which is struggling to cope with escalating trauma and emergency cases.”

Now, aid agencies must navigate Taliban rule. And there are questions about whether the group will support widespread Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns after openly opposing some polio immunisati­on campaigns in the past.

“Despite the Taliban’s history of disrupting public health and education efforts, the group has taken the threat of the Covid-19 pandemic seriously,” Roshni Kapur, a research analyst at the Institute of South Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore, wrote in April.

“It has emphasised the provision of public health services as part of a wider effort to reduce the spread of the virus and number of fatalities.”

The WHO’s Brennan said his staff had “heard nothing yet that would suggest that they would stand in the way of any of our major health activities”.

The biggest concern, he said, was making sure that female health-care workers and patients were still showing up at clinics. About 40% of those vaccinated against Covid-19 were women, he said. The Taliban generally support severe restrictio­ns for women in public life.

“What we’re hearing from our monitoring on a daily basis is that there’s been a bit of a fall-off in the attendance of women at the health clinics,” Brennan said. “It remains to be seen whether this is just a blip or if this is going to be sustained. But women’s access to health care is directly relevant to our ability to control Covid-19 well.”

 ?? Reuters ?? A MAN helps a child onto a wall to get inside Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in Kabul as crowds wait outside, hoping to be evacuated. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced by fighting between the Taliban and government forces in recent weeks. Social distancing to mitigate against the spread of Covid-19 is not the big priority for most Afghans right now. |
Reuters A MAN helps a child onto a wall to get inside Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in Kabul as crowds wait outside, hoping to be evacuated. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced by fighting between the Taliban and government forces in recent weeks. Social distancing to mitigate against the spread of Covid-19 is not the big priority for most Afghans right now. |

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