The Mercury

Fear, violence rules in many communitie­s during Covid-19

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HEALTH-CARE workers fighting coronaviru­s in dozens of countries are facing violence from fearful communitie­s who have attacked doctors and burned down clinics, aid agencies have said.

In South Africa, a testing station and a clinic were torched by people who did not want responders in their neighbourh­ood, said medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

“It’s a byproduct of the new, novel, infectious disease – there’s a lot of fear,” said Sean Christie, a spokesman for MSF in South Africa.

“Even for areas that have experience­d very big HIV and TB epidemics, this was just different. The media response was so overwhelmi­ng, and (there is) so much social media misinforma­tion,” he said.

In Colombia, ambulances were blocked from entering a town to screen for Covid-19 cases, said the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which recorded 611 incidents targeting health workers, patients and facilities from February to July.

Although government­s and charities have launched informatio­n campaigns, more work was needed to address fake news, make sure people had access to the facts and included local communitie­s in decision-making, aid workers said.

Drawing on first-hand accounts and media reports, the ICRC said incidents, including physical attacks, verbal harassment and threats took place in more than 40 countries including Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and the Philippine­s.

The real figure was likely much higher, the global humanitari­an agency said.

“Fear of contractin­g the disease and the lack of basic knowledge concerning Covid-19 are often the underlying reasons behind violent acts,” said Esperanza Martinez, the ICRC’s head of health.

“To protect health-care staff, medical facilities and patients from violence, it is of paramount importance to disseminat­e accurate informatio­n,” she said.

Some of the most common beliefs are that coronaviru­s is man-made, that it is not real, or that new testing facilities or health centres will bring it to communitie­s.

Some people in Haiti believe hospital patients are given a deadly injection to increase the number of coronaviru­s deaths so that the government can attract more aid, according to one community leader.

In Gambia, there have been no attacks but people are avoiding health facilities out of fear and trying to self-diagnose their illnesses, said Baba Balajo, a programme manager for the humanitari­an agency Catholic Relief Services.

“We have had people expressing the fear that nowadays when you go to the health facilities you are always diagnosed with Covid-19,” he said.

“It’s a problem because people now resort to going to pharmacies, and that may not resolve their health problems.”

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