Daniel Wesangula
A furious President Uhuru Kenyatta (pictured)
yesterday disbanded an inter-ministerial committee over its repeated
failures to adequately protect the country from the Corona virus.
The President acted just hours after the media and the public piled
pressure over the casual manner in
which relevant government bodies were
handling the global public health emergency.
Amid lapses in disaster preparedness and disjointed communication from
government, the President, in a terse Executive Order No. 2 of 2020,
dissolved the Cabinet Adhoc Committee on Health and the
Inter-ministerial Technical Committee on Government Response to the
Corona virus outbreak.
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The Saturday Standard has
learnt that the dissolution of the committee may be as a result of
inaction by the group over delays in executing a Corona Virus Action
Plan, written and presented to it by a team of experts in January.
Multiple interviews with senior technocrats across various ministries
show the contingency plan had mapped out the high risk Kenya should be
wary of and possibly limit interaction, the different scenarios that
could play out in case of infection, response plans to these scenarios
as well as a budget line to make all these possible.
The dissolved
committee had come under public scrutiny after a flight from China
landed at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) on Wednesday,
with little to no screening procedures being followed.
JKIA, which President Kenyatta described yesterday as a major transit
hub in his executive order, remains understaffed and with minimum
equipment to help deployed staff screen the hundreds of thousands of
passengers transiting through its doors every day.
Late Thursday, it was established that not all points of entry were
manned and that basic equipment, such as thermometers were barely
adequate, a revelation that led Kenyans to question genuineness of
efforts the government was putting into place to secure its borders.
“Kenya is a major international transport hub, with 70 per cent of
international passengers being on transit,” President Kenyatta said.
“There is significant threat arising from the potential spread of the
Corona Virus to Kenya from countries that have new and ongoing outbreaks
of the disease.”
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Global emergency
Since the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the outbreak a global
emergency, President Kenyatta’s government has come under heavy
criticism over the country’s preparedness.
“We are shocked at the recklessness with which the government is
handling the growing public health crisis posed by the Corona Virus. We
do not see neither evidence nor preparedness nor a government actively
involved in protecting its citizens from potential harm,” NARC Kenya
leader Martha Karua said yesterday.
“The government continues to expose our people to the highest possible risks of contracting the Corona virus.”
Chief Administrative Secretary for Health Rashid Aman, at a press
conference, said the country had set aside 11 beds at the Kenyatta
National Hospital (KNH) to deal with the threat of the virus, with
little reference to any other precautions.
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The
country’s only isolation unit has been under construction since early
2018. The isolation unit is a building at Mbagathi Hospital that used to
be a maternity wing and has been undergoing a painfully slow
refurbishment to convert it into a habitable isolation facility. During
its refurbishment period, Kenyans have toyed with disaster as various
communicable diseases including Ebola ravage the region.
Now, the newly created National Emergency Response Committee has just
seven days to make sure the isolation facility is up and running and
ready to receive patients, and two weeks to ensure that similar centres
are set up in Level 5 and referral hospitals across the country.
“There is demonstrable and compelling public interest further up scaling
Kenya’s level of preparedness and capacity to respond and contain this
emerging global threat,” the President said.
New committee
As the fallout within government over Corona Virus continues, new Health
Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe, who will chair the new committee was
officially handed over the reins of the ministry yesterday after
successfully being vetted by the National Assembly.
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From
the comforts of near retirement from politics, Kagwe now finds himself
at the centre of one of the world’s biggest health disasters with the
sole mandate, as directed by the President, “to immediately take up the
role of directing efforts to ensure Kenyans remain safe”.
Other members in the committee are Foreign Affairs, Transport, Defence,
ICT CSs as well as PS from these ministries and director generals from
Medical Services, Transport and Immigration Services. Missing from the
list is Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i.
The Corona Virus has manifested internationally across multiple
continents, with escalating numbers of new cases reported in different
isolated countries and through varied travel mediums.
Testing kits
Earlier, government Spokesman Cyrus Oguna insisted that the country was
well equipped to deal with the ongoing outbreak, saying the government
had bought testing kits and that they will no longer have to send
samples to South Africa for testing as has been the norm. On January 31,
WHO declared the outbreak a global health emergency as it rapidly
spread outside China.
It is believed that many low and middle-income countries such as Kenya
lack the tools to spot or contain the virus, raising the fear that once
infection occurs in these countries, the disease could spread
uncontrollably and that it may go unnoticed for some time.
The first Corona Virus case was reported on December 31 in China’s Wuhan
Province and has already claimed thousands of lives, leaving tens of
thousands more infected.
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