Experts are trying to figure out why Covid seems relatively absent in Kinshasa, the bustling, chaotic and overcrowded capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
But for many inhabitants, the city has been spared either through a miracle or -- in their view -- the disease was not as dangerous as billed.
"Covid in Kin? It doesn't exist," is heard around the sprawling city, where cases of the coronavirus were first reported more than a year ago.
"If Covid was really here, we would all be dead!" contended Lonzo, a hawker at a popular market.
"In the streets, on the buses, at home, we all live stuck together, trapped," he added, gesturing at the teeming crowds and the noisy traffic jams.
Struggle to survive
Resourcefulness is vital for daily life in poor districts of Kinshasa, which are often lacking water and electricity.
The poor wage a never-ending struggle for survival in the city's dilapidated, dirty and polluted townships.
Population estimates range from 12 and 17 million in the city that never sleeps.
Kinshasa
has been called "the Leopard City" because residents must always be
ready to defend themselves from attacks -- or pounce when necessary.
When the coronavirus arrived from Europe in sub-Saharan Africa's second largest city in March 2020, residents feared the worst.
But cases were concentrated in the Gombe business district.
Many
of the disadvantaged came to view the virus as a distant evil, a
disease of rich Congolese and white expats limited to the "Republic of
Gombe".
"Covid should have devastated us. But so far, we have been
spared," said Aimee Rugambo, a nurse at a government Covid treatment
centre at Vijana hospital.
"God is in control! He protected us," she said.
But "we must tell people that Covid exists," she warns. "It is in Kinshasa, and it kills."
'A certain resistance'
Official national figures show 30,862 cases since March 2020, the vast majority in Kinshasa (21,284), and 779 deaths.
The figure, if credible, is negligible in a gigantic country that has suffered war and suffering for the past three decades.
"We
will never know the number of infected or dead from corona -- most are
not tested," a Congolese journalist noted. "It's too complicated or too
expensive."
Grappling with so many other scourges on a daily basis, "you only go to the hospital if you are seriously ill," he said.
Kinshasa residents typically try home remedies and "saunas" -- inhalations -- if they ever catch a suspicious fever.
"Given
that (Covid) often occurs without symptoms and there have been few
deaths recorded, people still find it difficult to believe in it," said
Jules Mongomba, Covid supervisor in the municipality of Linguala.
"With our living conditions, we could also conclude that we may have developed a certain resistance," he mused.
Vaccine doses lost
At the national level, many questions remain, concerning the porosity
of borders, reliability of the test programme, meagre oxygen stocks and
the point of a loosely enforced curfew imposed only in the heart of
Kinshasa.
The only protective measure is a mask required in a few stores and administrative premises in the city centre.
Vaccination
is free and open to all, but the campaign is not taking off. At the
weekend only 11,000 people were reported vaccinated in Kinshasa, of a
national total of 14,434.
"People are sceptical," lamented Wamba Nice, director of the Vijana hospital.
"Many are afraid, mainly because of the rumours on social networks."
Only
two people showed up for the jab at the Vijana treatment centre, both
from the Indian subcontinent, who declined to speak. The day before, no
one came, but for now it is mainly foreigners who are benefiting from
it.
"Few people come... it's a shame," Dr Nice said, fearing that
some doses will have to be destroyed because they have gone beyond
their expiry date.
On May 10, the government announced the detection of five cases of the feared Indian variant in Kinshasa itself.
"The
Indian variant is already in the Congo," President Felix Tshisekedi
warned. "We in Africa have received God's blessing. We have not had as
many deaths as in Europe or America. But beware, the situation is
changing."
For caregivers, the lull observed since February is over. "The cases are increasing," worries Dr Nice.
In his eyes, "the third wave has already started."
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