African nations fail to find coronavirus quarantine escapees
Police across swathes of Africa have failed
to find more than a fraction of hundreds of people who have escaped from often
unsanitary and uncomfortable Covid-19 quarantine centres in recent weeks.
There are more than 130,000 confirmed cases
of Covid-19 in Africa, but low levels of testing means the true total is likely
to be much higher.
In Malawi, more than 400 people repatriated
from South Africa and elsewhere fled a makeshift centre set up at a stadium in
Blantyre, the commercial capital, last week. Police and health workers told
reporters they were unable to stop the escapees as they lacked adequate
protective gear.
At least 46 escapees had tested positive
for the virus, officials said. Some of those who fled told reporters they had
bribed police. In separate incidents 26 people left the Mwanza border post
while waiting for test results and eight others, all tested and shown to be
infected, broke out of an isolation centre in Blantyre.
In Zimbabwe, Paul Nyathi, a police
spokesman, said a total of 148 people had escaped from centres where a 21-day
quarantine is mandatory for those returning from abroad.
“Security has been beefed up at the quarantine
centres and measures are being taken to repair porous dura walls and security
fences at some of the facilities,” Nyathi said.
There has also been at least one mass
breakout in Kenya, while individuals have also escaped from quarantine in
Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda and Namibia.
Zimbabwe’s information minister, Monica
Mutsvangwa, told reporters earlier this month that the government is increasing
security at the schools, colleges and hotels used as quarantine centres.
Government spokesman Nick Mangwana suggested that security officers guarding
centres with high walls and razor wire might be receiving bribes to allow
people to leave early.
Nearly all of Zimbabwe’s 75 new coronavirus
cases last week came from centres that hold hundreds of people who have
returned, sometimes involuntarily, from neighbouring South Africa and Botswana.
There have been widespread complaints about
conditions in the quarantine centres, but the president, Emmerson Mnangagwa,
said the returnees should not expect luxury.
“We can try to provide for them, but we
cannot provide five-star facilities like hotels,” Mnangagwa said on Thursday.
Norman Matara, secretary general of the
Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association, told the Guardian it was impossible to
observe social distancing in the centres, which posed a significant risk to
those held in them and to the country as a whole.
“It is disturbing. It may show that people
are being infected in quarantine centres. So people should not share things
like amenities and do not eat in overcrowded dining rooms,” Matara said.
South Africa, a developed economy which
attracts migrant workers from across the region, has more than 27,000 confirmed
cases of Covid-19 – the most in Africa. There are fears that the outbreak there
could spread across southern Africa, where health systems are considerably less
able to cope.
Zimbabwe’s government is also worried about
people crossing porous borders illegally. The information ministry has set up a
hotline number and is asking people to stop harbouring “border jumpers” and
those who “abscond” from quarantine.
The busy border with South Africa was shut
in March but there are close to 200 illegal crossing points used by traffickers
to obtain basic goods that are unavailable or unaffordable in Zimbabwe.
Earlier this month, 41 Malawian immigrants
were picked up by police after skipping the border from South Africa through
the Limpopo River. Nine are being kept at a quarantine centre at the Beitbridge
border point after they tested positive for Covid-19.
Sean Muguti, a freight clearing agent at
Beitbridge, said smugglers were working with truckers: “It is a battle for
survival … They will always find ways to beat the system.”
South Africa has been able to provide
relatively comfortable quarantine facilities when necessary, hosting one group
of nationals returning from China in a tourist lodge in the province of Limpopo.
But elsewhere centres are often unsanitary,
uncomfortable and in some cases dangerous, human rights campaigners say.
In Kenya, investigations by Human Rights
Watch revealed poor conditions, including lack of bedding, water, food, and
cleaning supplies. People held in quarantine facilities told HRW they were not
told of test results and that staff did not wear protective equipment.
A 22-year-old man who was quarantined
following his arrival from France on 23 March told the organisation that his
centre had lacked electricity, bathing water, food and water to drink.
“The beds had no mattresses or beddings. I
slept on the spring bed with no mattress and nothing to cover myself. They told
me I had to pay for water,” he said.
Many others described similar conditions in
other facilities and said the authorities sometimes extended quarantine periods
from the initial mandatory 14 days to more than 30 days, even when people
tested negative several times.
All were asked to pay for accommodation,
food and other costs before being allowed to leave. Many of those who could not
pay were held for additional days and in one instance police were called in to
beat those who persisted in pleading their inability to pay, victims and
witnesses said.




