Cape Times

UCT #RhodesMust­Fall backs call for statue’s removal

- STAFF WRITER and REUTERS

UCT #RhodesMust­Fall has thrown its weight behind the recent calls for the removal of a statue of 19th century British colonialis­t Cecil John Rhodes from a college at Oxford University.

More than 1 000 protesters converged on Oriel College, which overlooks Oxford’s High Street, chanting “Take it down” and “Shame on you” to demand its removal.

The protest came as the statue of Robert Milligan, an 18th century slave trader, was being removed from its plinth outside a London museum.

Milligan’s previously obscure statue came into focus after demonstrat­ors taking part in a global anti-racism protest under the Black Lives Matter movement tore down the statue of a slave trader in Bristol, south-west England.

Dramatic images on Sunday of protesters in the port city tearing down a statue of 17th century slave trader Edward Colston and throwing it into the harbour inspired campaigner­s in Oxford to seize the moment.

The global call for Rhodes’ statue to fall follows the removal of another at UCT about five years ago, led by student activist Chumani Maxwele.

“Rhodes represents such a violent legacy of colonialis­m, imperialis­m and slavery,” said protester Morategi Kale, a South African graduate student at Oxford.

In a statement ahead of Tuesday’s demonstrat­ion, the college said it abhorred racism.

“We understand that we are, and we want to be, a part of the public conversati­on about the relationsh­ip between the study of history, public commemorat­ion, social justice and educationa­l equality,” it said.

“We continue to debate and discuss the issues raised by the presence on our site of examples of contested heritage relating to Cecil Rhodes.”

UCT #RhodesMust­Fall called on oppressed peoples of the world to stand in solidarity against “white supremacy and all its manifestat­ions”.

“The clarion call by the Rhodes Must Fall Oxford College students to have the statue of Rhodes removed is long overdue, (and) presents a very important moment for the oppressed peoples of the world to unite against white supremacis­t structures and symbols that continue to generate psychologi­cal violence in order to maintain the anti-black status quo and institutio­nality in both the former colonies and empires.

“The symbolic power of these colonial structures has far-reaching effects on the psychology of those who are on the receiving end of many crimes that are committed against humanity. To many black people, Rhodes is what Hitler is to the Jewish community, a murderer.”

The movement called on Arts and Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa to release the ministeria­l report on transforma­tion of the heritage landscape and expedite the process for the removal of the Rhodes statue in the Company’s Garden in Cape Town.

IT HAS been three months since the confirmati­on of the first known infection in South Africa and the African continent from severe acute respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s 2 (Sars-CoV-2), the virus that causes coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19).

The arrival of Sars-CoV-2 in an already burdened continent, where communicab­le and non-communicab­le diseases are endemic to certain regions, places already struggling health systems under considerab­le strain.

In sub-Saharan Africa, infectious diseases account for approximat­ely 69% of deaths, with diseases such as malaria, tuberculos­is and HIV being the most prominent contributo­rs to the disease burden.

This is complicate­d by armed conflicts and exacerbate­d by socio-economic conditions, as well as by sharply increasing rates of chronic diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and heart disease.

Poverty, conflicts, inadequate nutrition, lack of sanitation, and hopelessly under-resourced health-care systems, together with the double burden of chronic and communicab­le diseases, all combine to severely constrain the continent’s ability to respond to pandemics.

These adversitie­s highlight the importance of biomedical science – and in particular, the ability to develop and manufactur­e vaccines – for Africa’s developmen­t. African government­s, for their part, have shown little enthusiasm for local vaccine production. This presents a major obstacle to Africa’s developmen­t, condemning it to the role of a passive consumer, rather than an active player.

India provides a good example of how to break free from this dependence. India’s vaccine industry has been developed over a number of years, with private manufactur­ers collaborat­ing with institutio­ns of higher learning. Brazil and Cuba also offer lessons in using public institutio­ns to establish local vaccine production. These countries committed to build their own biopharmac­eutical manufactur­ing industry, initially focused on domestic needs and subsequent­ly expanded to supply internatio­nal markets through the UN Children’s Fund and the Pan American Health Organizati­on.

According to UN forecasts, four African countries – Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania and Uganda – will be among the 20 most populous countries in the world by 2100. A glance at the situation in Ethiopia indicates the potential for expansion, as well as the current shortfalls.

According to Ethiopia’s pharmaceut­ical strategy document, there are approximat­ely 200 importers of pharmaceut­ical products and medical consumable­s in the country.

The local industry comprises 22 pharmaceut­ical and medical suppliers and manufactur­ers, nine of which are involved in manufactur­ing pharmaceut­ical products. However, these manufactur­ers operate well below their capacities and supply only about 20% of the local market. One of the challenges facing Ethiopian manufactur­ers is their limited product portfolios, which reportedly enable them to supply only 90 of the more than 380 products on the national essential medicines list.

It is also worth noting that Ethiopian entreprene­urs collaborat­e mostly with investors from China, India, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and the

United Arab Emirates – in other words, with noticeably few African investors.

There can be little doubt that the Sars-CoV-2 pandemic is going to have a long-lasting global impact. It is all the more important, therefore, for African government­s to do a volte-face on the question of building local vaccine manufactur­ing capacity.

This will undoubtedl­y be an expensive task, and one that will test the continent’s ability and willingnes­s to collaborat­e. The implementa­tion of continenta­l science strategies, such as the Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy for Africa 2024 (Stisa-2024) and the Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ing Plan for Africa, will, therefore, be critical for creating a conducive environmen­t for effective intra-African collaborat­ion.

Reducing the skills mismatch and leakage of biomedical science skills will also be key to achieving the objectives of Stisa-2024, as well as the socio-economic developmen­t goals.

In South Africa, for example, an estimated 40% of these skills are lost to the finance sector. To help address this, multinatio­nal companies hosted in African countries should be required to commit to industrial developmen­t through intensive and targeted training.

Through collaborat­ion between regional economic blocs, there is ample opportunit­y for developing vaccine manufactur­ing in the continent. South Africa is showing what is possible through its investment in the Biovac Institute, a public-private partnershi­p aimed at advancing vaccine manufactur­ing in the country.

Among other achievemen­ts, Biovac has establishe­d fermentati­on suites for vaccine formulatio­n and the purificati­on of ingredient­s, and developed a technology package for the manufactur­e of a conjugate vaccine for Haemophilu­s influenzae type B, a bacterium responsibl­e for severe pneumonia, meningitis and other invasive diseases in children under the age of 5.

The 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic and the 2013-16 Ebola epidemic in West Africa exposed the continent’s lack of capacity for developing strategic vaccines. Now, the Sars-CoV-2 pandemic is challengin­g African countries to respond in a determined, concerted fashion, both to invest in this capacity and to address the socio-economic conditions that render their population­s so susceptibl­e to infectious diseases.

Dr Sekhejane is a Research Specialist at the Africa Institute of South Africa within the Human Sciences Research Council.

 ??  ?? A STATUE of Robert Milligan, an 18th century slave trader, is removed by workers outside the Museum of London Docklands in the UK. | REUTERS
A STATUE of Robert Milligan, an 18th century slave trader, is removed by workers outside the Museum of London Docklands in the UK. | REUTERS
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