resident Museveni waves as he arrives at Kololo ceremonial grounds in Kampala to deliver his state of the nation address on June 7, 2023. PHOTO/ DAVID LUBOWA
Summary
· Earlier, Mr Mathias Mpuuga, the Leader of Opposition in Parliament had slammed state house, arguing that testing for Covid-19 before meeting the president was a waste of public resources which could be
channeled into other developmental activities.Uganda's President Museveni said
Wednesday that one of the three Covid-19 tests he undertook in the morning
turned out positive with the virus, days after World Health Organisation (WHO)
said the pandemic, which killed millions of people and wreaked economic and
social havoc, no longer constitutes a global health emergency.
“This morning, I was feeling as if I
had a cold. I took a rapid Coronavirus test which indicated negative. However,
my samples were taken for a deeper analysis. One was negative and the other
positive. So, I am a suspect of Corona as I speak. That's why I came in a
separate car with Maama,” Mr Museveni said during his State-of-the-Nation
address boycotted by Opposition MPs protesting what they described as “careless
spending”, especially on “costly Covid-19 tests” for anyone to attend the
president’s public meetings.
The Permanent Secretary Ministry of
Health, Dr Diana Atwine, who's Mr Museveni's personal doctor said the president
was in "robust health."
"Today June 7, 2023 H.E The
President tested positive for covid-19 . This was after developing mild flue
-like symptoms. However he is in robust health and continues to perform his
duties normally while adhering to SOPs," she tweeted momemonets after Mr
Museveni's address.
Earlier, Mr Mathias Mpuuga, the
Leader of Opposition in Parliament had slammed state house, arguing that
testing for Covid-19 before meeting the president was a waste of public
resources which could be channeled into other developmental activities.
“The World Health Organization (WHO)
declared an end to Covid-19 as a global health emergency. However, Gen Museveni
continues to waste public resources to specific companies owned by individuals
close to the regime on COVID tests whenever he meets people both at his home
and other parts of the country,” Mpuuga told journalists hours before Mr
Museveni’s address at Kololo.
Mr Mpuuga then advised Mr Museveni, 78, and his family to take a booster dose
if he was “anxious about Covid-19.”
During the address, however, the
president said Uganda’s health capacity in vaccine development and other
interventions like spreading malaria awareness and prevention had been
strengthened over the last three years after the outbreak of Covid-19.
Early last month, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
declared Covid-19 over as a global health emergency.
The move came after the WHO's
independent emergency committee on the Covid crisis agreed it no longer merited
the organisation's highest alert level and "advised that it is time to
transition to long-term management of the COVID-19 pandemic".
But the danger was not over,
according to Tedros, who estimated Covid had killed "at least 20
million" people -- about three times the nearly seven million deaths
officially recorded.
"This virus is here to stay. It is still killing, and it's still
changing," he said.
"The worst thing any country could do now is to use this news as a reason
to let down its guard, to dismantle the systems it has built, or to send the
message to its people that Covid-19 is nothing to worry about."
Never again
The UN health agency first declared the so-called public health emergency of
international concern (PHEIC) over the crisis on January 30, 2020.
That was weeks after the mysterious new viral disease was first detected in
China and when fewer than 100 cases and no deaths had been reported outside
that country.
But it was only after Tedros
described the worsening Covid situation as a pandemic on March 11, 2020, that
many countries woke up to the danger.
By then, the SARS CoV-2 virus which causes the disease had already begun its
deadly rampage around the globe.
"One of the greatest tragedies
of Covid-19 is that it didn't have to be this way," Tedros said, decrying
that "a lack of coordination, a lack of equity and a lack of
solidarity" meant "lives were lost that should not have been".
"We must promise ourselves and our children and grandchildren that we will
never make those mistakes again."
Even though Covid deaths globally have
plunged 95 percent since January, the disease remains a major killer.
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