Irungu Houghton \
The CoronaVirus just escalated from epidemic to an info-demic. Public
anxiety is justifiably at an all-
time high. Nairobi is now the sixth
most vulnerable city in Africa to Covid-19 infection. The handling of
the China Southern Airlines flight on Wednesday must cause us to ask
hard questions of our Government.
The Corona virus has killed 3,000 people and infected 31,000 people across 40 countries since December 31.
The cost in terms of trade and medical has reached $360 billion
globally. Three of Africa’s largest economies and populations, Egypt,
Algeria and now Nigeria have reported cases of affected persons. Given
our relative closer proximity and easier access to China, it is
inevitable that our “patient zero”, the first patient positively
diagnosed, will soon show up on Kenyan soil.
World Health Organization’s Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
has advised all countries to prepare. The virus doesn’t respect borders
or distinguish between races or ethnicities. Preventing travellers from
bringing the virus is one challenge, the second is what do we do with
them when they arrive? It is not if, but when it happens, that Kenyans
must consider.
SEE ALSO :China virus cases spike, 17 new infections reported
The
direct flight, arrival and disembarkation of 239 passengers from
Guangzhou, a neighbouring province to Wuhan, left many in shock and
disgust. It had taken concerted public pressure from pilots and the
public to suspend all Kenya Airways flights from January 31, 2020. The
decision does not come without a cost. One Nairobi-Guangzhou round trip
generates Sh14.9 million shillings. Notwithstanding, the prudent
decision by Kenya Airways has been replicated by no less than 73 other
airlines. They include Lufthansa, British Airways, American Airlines and
Air India among others.
Two weeks
Government responses that stopping direct flights from China would be
discriminatory, passengers with symptoms could “self-quarantine” for two
weeks and 11 beds have been set aside has done little to reassure the
public. The vulnerability of current health system does not allow us to
leave anything to chance. Only a handful of African countries have the
samples and laboratories to test for the CoronaVirus. Kenya is not one
of them yet. Up to now, we have had to rely on the National Institute on
Communicable Disease in Johannesburg. Threatening the job of a Kenya
Airways staffer and whistle-blower for alerting the public of the
arrival of the China Southern Airlines plane merely reveals a government
chasing its tail as a 10-tonne truck careers towards it, and us.
There have been five other declarations of similar epidemics in last
decade. They include Ebola (2019), Zika (2016), Polio and Ebola (2014)
and Swine Flu pandemic (2009). Apart from the ravaging impact of
rinderpest at the beginning of the last decade, our health system has
never been tested by a major epidemic, fortunately. We must keep it so.
Citizens must internalise the recent Health Ministry advisories and call
in any fever, cough and breathing difficulties to 0800721316,
0732353535, 0729471414. The Health Ministry should accelerate its
capacity to run diagnostics locally and with county governments, train
health workers on early detection, prevention and management.
Personally, there is absolutely no comfort in the self-isolation policy
announced this week. It assumes too high an integrity level of all of
us. Yesterday’s Executive Order by President Uhuru Kenyatta is a welcome
start. However, it is disappointingly short on how to prevent the virus
from arriving on direct flights. Is it perhaps, because we are past
this stage? The declaration also excludes important relationships with
the Council of Governors and vital non-state actors like the Kenya
Medical Association and Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and
Dentists Union.
SEE ALSO :China confirms virus spreading between humans
The
declaration of a national emergency is not a light declaration. It
represents the seriousness of this moment and we need all actors on
board.
A suspicion is growing that public health imperatives are currently
being traded for commercial, trade or diplomatic considerations. We hope
that the National Committee will put the health rights and lives of
Kenyans first. With the first human trial scheduled for April,
scientists are in a race to find a vaccine for the virus. By then, the
Covid-19 outbreak could be a full global pandemic. We must make sure
that we do not allow this to happen on our soil. The costs are simply
too high.
- The writer is Amnesty International Executive Director. He writes in his personal capacity. Email: Irungu.houghton@amnesty.or.ke
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