Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

Africa begins vaccines, Tanzania told to trust science

GEORGE OBULUTSA

Some African nations have begun administering vaccines against COVID-19, regional health officials said, though Tanzania’s dissenting president was singled out for his trust in alternative remedies and God.

John Nkengasong, director of the African Union (AU) bloc’s disease control and prevention body, said a few countries had begun vaccinating: Morocco, Egypt, Seychelles and Guinea.

“Guinea is very limited, just about 50 to 60 vaccinations have occurred. But these other countries have started mainly with the vaccine from China,” he told an online briefing.

Advertisements

In addition to 270 million doses previously secured, the AU has signed an agreement with India’s Serum Institute for 400 million doses of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.

“Remember, this is spread over this year and to next year,” added Nkengasong, whose Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has not yet given allocation details. Health bodies hope to vaccinate about 30-35% of Africans this year.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli is exasperating health workers by discouraging mask-wearing and social distancing, warning that vaccines are dangerous and failing to publish coronavirus data since mid-2020.

On Wednesday, Magufuli said, without evidence, that vaccines were a foreign plot to spread illness and steal Africa’s wealth. He urged Tanzanians instead to trust God and use alternative remedies such as steam inhalation.

His government has not published nationwide figures since May 8, when it had 509 cases and 21 deaths.

READ:  Germany and Tanzania to open talks on colonial legacy 

‘BEYOND SATAN’

“We in Tanzania managed to stay for a year without corona. Even here, no one has put on a mask. Our God is beyond Satan and Satan will always fail using different diseases,” he said in Wednesday’s speech in his western home area.

Previously, Magufuli has also scoffed at imported testing kits, saying they returned positive results on a goat and fruit.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Africa director Matshidiso Moeti responded by urging Tanzania to implement mask-wearing and other measures, prepare vaccinations and share data.

“Africa is at a crossroads and all Africans must double down on preventive measures,” she told an online news conference, saying WHO officials were in touch with Tanzanian officials. “Science shows that vaccines work.”

Though COVID-19 has not hit Africa as badly as other regions, experts fear wealth disparities, logistical difficulties and “vaccine nationalism” by developed nations may put the world’s poorest continent at a disadvantage.

Advertisements

With a population of 1.3 billion people, Africa has reported 3.5 million infections and 88,000 deaths, according to a Reuters tally. That is fewer fatalities than individual nations the United States, Brazil, India, Mexico and Britain.

Nkesangong said the Africa CDC was reaching out to China, Russia and Cuba to explore obtaining more vaccines, and would work with any partner whose vaccine was safe and effective.

Advertisements
By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION