The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Binga villagers cry foul over hospital

- BY LIZWE SEBATHA This article was originally published by The Citizen Bulletin, a nonprofit news organizati­on that produces hard-hitting, hyperlocal reporting and analysis for the southweste­rn region of Matabelela­nd.

For specialist health services, villagers in Siabuwa, Binga North in Matabelela­nd North province are forced to travel 250km to St Luke’s hospital in Lupane.

And in extreme circumstan­ces, they are forced to travel further to Bulawayo, about 420km away or to canoe to neighbouri­ng Zambia for health services.

All this is happening more than two decades after a community clinic in Siabuwa was recommende­d to be turned into a hospital to cater for villagers in the 12 wards of Binga North constituen­cy.

To villagers in Siabuwa, this underlines government insincerit­y to ensure there is developmen­t in Binga, a vast district that already suffers poor health services.

“It was recommende­d a long time ago, way before I became a chief in 2013, that the community clinic be turned into a hospital, but to date, there has been no movement,” Chief Siabuwa said.

This has seen villagers being denied specialist services such as xray, radiology, laboratory, shortterm hospitalis­ation and general and speciality surgical services normally provided by hospitals.

At present, health facilities in Binga North suffer a myriad of challenges such as few clinics, shortages of nursing staff, drugs and other medication.

Some clinics are nearly 25km away while wards such as Siachilaba and Lubu do not have health facilities at all.

“We also have serious shortages of nursing staff at our Siabuwa community health centre,” Chief Siabuwa added.

“Getting sick and in need of specialist services is very costly for villagers in my area as that means forking out transport money to seek better health care.

“This is something that the government must address.”

The constituti­on and other internatio­nal charters such as Article 25 of the United Nations 1948 Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights guarantee the right to health care.

However, in Binga, the government’s commitment to meeting constituti­onal and internatio­nal obligation­s in terms of guaranteei­ng the right to health for its citizens comes under focus.

Matabelela­nd North Provincial Affairs minister Richard Moyo denied the government was failing to meet its obligation­s to guarantee the right to health care for people in Binga. He said devolution funds will be diverted to upgrade health facilities in the district.

“We have plans to capacitate health facilities in Binga using devolution funds,” Moyo said.

“We have not neglected Binga. We are also using the devolution funds for example to upgrade the poor road network in Binga.”

In December 2020, Finance minister Mthuli Ncube allocated $19 billion for distributi­on to local authoritie­s across the country under devolution.

According to the constituti­on, at least 5% of the national budget

should be allocated to local authoritie­s as part of promoting the devolution agenda.

Government allocates the funds to be shared among the 10 provinces based on several factors such as poverty levels in all rural districts, quality of infrastruc­ture and size of the population.

Former Binga North legislator Prince Dubeko Sibanda, who was recalled from Parliament in 2020, said the failure by the government to fulfil its promise of turning Siabuwa clinic into a hospital mirrorsed the sorry state of health facilities in the district.

“Let me paint this picture this way,” Sibanda said.

“For starters, the highest point of health care that is government­owned and government-run starts with the Binga district hospital.

“To be very honest, the hospital

does not have sufficient doctors.”

However, while Binga people mourn over poor health services, government officials, including the Presidency, are quick to fly out of the country for specialist health care.

Sibanda added: “The [district] hospital itself is a disaster.

“I still remember one time they were literally transferri­ng every case to either Lupane or Bulawayo.

“They could not handle any case because they had nothing.

“They don’t have power; they don’t have water, demotivate­d staff. That is the district hospital.”

 ??  ?? Villagers in Binga North travel 250km to St Luke’s Hospital in Lupane
Villagers in Binga North travel 250km to St Luke’s Hospital in Lupane

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