National Issues
Covid-19 Lockdown: A Radical View -By Azu Ishiekwene
The government did not extend the lockdown by two weeks
to punish us. But the unintended consequence of the extension for a
poor country such as ours will be just that: hardship beyond
description, misery by default.
Yet, that might not even be
the worst thing. It appears that on top of the hardship, a good number
of people would also have to endure the indescribable feeling that
they’re being ripped off by people who are claiming to bring them
relief.
Politicians are feathering their nests using COVID-19 as
excuse; a few security men deployed to enforce the lockdown are
exploiting it. Increasingly, the losers are citizens that the lockdown
is supposed to save and protect.
I hope I’m wrong. But the way
things are going, we may spend the next two weeks quibbling about
relief, especially relief involving public funds and resources, while
making very little progress, if at all, on how to contain COVID-19 and
keep the virus from spreading.
Our data is notoriously
unreliable and if a professor can conceal the report of an infected
patient under his care as we saw in Ilorin recently while leaving many
others exposed, then you’ll be entitled to worry genuinely about just
how much we know and is being reported.
Until a few days ago, I
was a big fan of testing, testing, testing. I still believe testing is
important because data, reliable data, ought to direct action. But
considering where we are at today (about 6,000 tests so far, and at an
official figure of 500 daily), it will take 3,600 days or 10 years to
test one per cent, that is 1.8m of our population or five years, if we
double the testing rate.
Therefore, instead of locking people
down for another two weeks hoping that they’ll be looked after by the
head of a presidential task force who didn’t know our hospitals were in a
shambles till now, we should take the COVID-19 bull by the horns.
And
that was what I was hoping President Muhammadu Buhari would address in
his speech on Monday. We may not have the best hospitals or the best
healthcare system, but on COVID-19, we have a few things going for us
which we need to focus on instead of locking ourselves away in fear and
despair, while exploiters take advantage.
A few of the best
authorities and studies on epidemics suggest that “high temperature and
high relative humidity” tend to impede the spread of the virus.
Also,
though only anecdotal evidence exists for now, acquired immunity and
resilience among populations in flu or fever endemic areas such as ours
have served as defenses of sorts, with allowance, of course, for
pre-existing conditions.
If you consider the numbers that are
being discharged daily, especially in Lagos where 61 (out of 189 who
tested positive) had been discharged as at Monday night, the question
is: what are the survivors being treated with that can be of use, under
medical advice, to a much larger symptomatic population?
Why
are we not being told, by verified channels, what the survivors are
using and what efforts are being made to extend their use, instead of
this obsession with copying and pasting what is happening in Europe and
the US, where the prevailing conditions are not exactly the same as
ours?
COVID-19 survivor and Chief Medical Director of the
University College Hospital, Ibadan, Prof Jesse Otegbayo, said that he
used a combination of hydroxychloroquine and Vitamin C, which he had
been using early on (possibly combined with paracetamol), under medical
advice, for treatment.
A registered family doctor in Monroe, New York, Vladimir Zelenko,
said he successfully treated 699 patients who presented with COVID-19
symptoms with “a cocktail of drugs including the anti-malarial drug,
hydroxychloroquine.”
My gut feeling — and this is mine alone —
is that there are hundreds of Nigerians who have COVID-19 symptoms, but
who either out of shame, fear, ignorance, poverty or a combination of
all of these, have decided to treat themselves with whatever herbs they
can find and not a few will survive without knowing how, but happy and
relieved to survive anyway.
Instead of locking people down and
forcing them to choose between breaking the law to survive and staying
at home for hunger to further erode their immunity, we should take the
fight to the virus.
In addition to shedding more light on the
treatments that have been successful and finding ways of making such
treatments more widely available under medical advice, the Federal
Government can also follow the lead of the Ekiti State Government by
insisting that going forward, all Nigerians must wear face masks
outdoors, at this time.
That is not difficult or expensive to
make and security men can be deployed in major crowd-prone areas to
enforce compliance instead of leaving them to roam as emergency
commercial bus drivers.
Also, instead of concentrating test kits
in a few locations, some private hospitals can be encouraged to open
test centres, while the Federal Government focuses on expanding
laboratories from the present 12 and helping states set up Coronavirus
wards in more public hospitals.
Buhari’s promise to expand the
social safety register by one million is commendable, but fraught and
daunting. It is also significant that Buhari addressed the country twice
in two weeks, to underscore the emergency of the moment and a break
from the president’s character in his five-year presidency. Yet, his
speech could have gone much farther.
What is the point in
extending lockdown when desperate transporters are paying armed
policemen to carry loads of passengers, who may or may not be carrying
the virus, from one state to another?
And by the way, a number of states, driven by fear, ignorance or
indifference, are doing their own thing. How did we arrive at 14 days
extension, instead of one week or even three? And what exactly is the
plan after the extension?
Government may already have an idea
what it intends to do. It has said it won’t fire public servants, but
would do all it can to help farmers and start-ups. But with a recent
forecast by Agusto Consulting that the post-COVID-19 economy could
recess more than in 2016 and oil prices at $30 per barrel, where is the
money coming from?
Private sector employers are watching
closely, asking themselves why in the perilous and uncertain days ahead
they should go back to the number of staff they had pre-COVID-19
lockdown, knowing what they now know technology can do. There’ll be very
painful trade-offs.
Public anger and resentment about the
extension is not because people do not value their lives. Or because
they want to harm others. It’s largely because they think some people
are using the lockdown to make money and enrich themselves while
preventing the mass of the population who live from hand-to-mouth, from
going out to help themselves.
I know a hair dresser who provides
only home service because she cannot afford the cost of renting a shop.
Her husband is a conductor who barely gets enough daily to make ends
meet. How will the couple cope with their three children when the woman
cannot go out to make customers’ hair and the man cannot leave home
because commercial buses are grounded for four weeks?
The man
does not need to tell me. Like millions of Nigerians in his shoes, he
will go out, even if it kills him. Every single avoidable death is sad.
But who says that at the end of this extension, even by current data,
there’ll be fewer deaths from the virus than there would be from
malaria, Lassa fever or armed robbery over the same period?
How do we save people from COVID-19 and save COVID-19 from becoming another scam?
Take,
for example, the announcement by the Federal Government that it would
distribute as palliatives, 150 trailer-loads of rice seized by Customs.
If
the 150 trailer-loads of rice were shared equally across the 36 states
— from Lagos with over 20 million people to Bayelsa with 1.7m — each
will get about 2,500 bags, since each trailer contains roughly 600 bags.
But ten days after the announcement, nothing has been seen or heard
yet. The intention may be great, but the sheer cost of the logistics
would make the exercise prone to abuse. The idea that any African
government can feed people is a pathetic joke.
It gets curiouser as you go up the food chain. While there is already
a petition that Governor Ahmadu Fintiri of Adamawa State diverted 23
trailer loads of relief materials sent to the state for COVID-19, the
Northern Governor’s Forum is asking for money to fight the virus.
The
Forum did not say what the money would be used for – PPE, ventilators,
test centres and kits, allowances for medical personnel, palliatives –
or what?
Yet, we’re told, in the name of COVID-19, that the
states need money — money that may not reach the millions of people in
lockdown at home, money that will not be accounted for or deployed even
remotely for the benefit of citizens. And we must accept more
restriction as reward for this hubris?
In the end, it would be
every man for himself. The earlier people are allowed to go out and
begin to put their lives back together again, the better for everyone
before the cure gets more deadly than the disease.
Ishiekwene is the MD/Editor-in-Chief of The Interview