Covid-19, the great revealer, illustrates how we are led by hucksters in high office [View this email in your browser]( March 30, 2021
[Mail & Guardian]( [Mail & Guardian]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Instagram]( [YouTube]( Hi there, By now you ought to be familiar with the basic premise of vaccine nationalism. Wealthy countries and blocs like Canada, the US and the EU are stockpiling Covid-19 vaccines and [refusing to support a motion]( at the World Trade Organisation, brought by South Africa and India, to waive intellectual property rights that will allow poorer nations to manufacture generic versions of the vaccines. The World Health Organisationâs own initiative to distribute vaccines to developing nations, the Covax Alliance, is not safe from the intrusion of wealthy countries: either they have been slow to support it; or, in Canadaâs case, have actively undermined it by signing up for 1.9-million doses, despite having already purchased enough vaccines for each of its citizens to be vaccinated six times over, Aanu Adeoye [writes in The Continent](. But whatâs missing from this discussion is the culpability of African leaders in leaving us once again dependent on the largesse of Western nations. In an unsurprisingly routine turn of events, Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari is [off to London today for a routine medical check-up]( the presidency said. The 78-year-old will set off after meeting the nationâs security chiefs, [spokesperson Femi Adesina told Bloomberg](. The junket is expected to go on until the second week of April. If your hypocrite alarm is going off, thereâs a good reason. In 2015, Buhari campaigned on ending medical tourism â the practice of Nigerian politicians travelling abroad for medical care. But he himself became known for spending long periods in Britain being treated for undisclosed ailments. Since becoming president, he has visited the UK on at least five medical trips, including a lengthy stay of more than five months in 2017. The presidentâs aides insisted their boss was just fine, even as images of a markedly slimmer Buhari receiving visitors emerged. In the absence of concrete evidence, speculation grew, and an outlandish story about a body double (âJubril from Sudanâ) replacing Buhari came to be widely believed in many circles around the country. The rumour gained so much traction [Buhari himself had to dispel it](. Buhariâs case was not Nigeriaâs first nor worst rodeo with a presidentâs failing health being shrouded in secrecy. Before him, Umaru YarâAdua, who served as president of the country from 2007 until 2010, died in office after a long illness, which was mostly concealed from the public. His condition precipitated a constitutional crisis because he had neglected to make proper succession arrangements before he became too weak to do so. And it isnât just Nigeria that has presidents whose only encounter with their countryâs healthcare systems is through photo ops and news reports. Zimbabweâs late president Robert Mugabe was notorious for his Singaporean jaunts, often commandeering the national carrier to jet off at a momentâs notice. Algeriaâs president Abdelmadjid Tebboune, who contracted Covid-19 earlier this year, sloped off to receive treatment in Europe. Gabonâs President Ali Bongo has spent months shuttling between hospitals in Saudi Arabia and Morocco, and looks more fragile every time he makes a public appearance. Former Angolan president José Eduardo Dos Santos was absent for nearly a month before the government confirmed he was receiving medical treatment in Spain. And, of course, thereâs the late Michael Sata, the Zambian president who suggested reports of his ailing health were treasonous, before expiring in a London hospital in 2014. Today we have to contend with our leadersâ loud condemnation of vaccine nationalism, but thatâs not the whole story. Rather ambitiously 20 years ago, members of the African Union agreed to spend 15% of their national budgets on health. By 2018, only two countries had met this lofty goal. Nigeriaâs biggest increase in five years in 2020 saw it rise only to 4%. In a country in which doctors are routinely underpaid and work in deplorable conditions, thatâs not nearly enough. Amid a crushing pandemic, South Africaâs killer austerity budget meant it went the other way, Sarah Smit reports. Yes, our country [cut its own health budget]( recently. In addition to this, the countryâs vaccine roll-out plan has teetered along, with the government now planning to vaccinate 22-million citizens between November 2020 and February 2022. Throw out that previously promised target of 67% of the population by the end of year. Incomprehensibly, not one single vaccine was administered over the 19 March long weekend â for three days. These are Africaâs two biggest economies. In smaller countries, the situation is even more bleak. Despite Equatorial Guineaâs immense oil wealth, more than half of its population of 1.4-million people does not have reliable access to clean water. If African leaders actually had to use their own under-funded health systems, perhaps we wouldnât be again showing up hat in hand. We can righteously berate Western nations for hoarding vaccines for themselves, but we must never forget to direct some of that ire to our own leaders. Yours in solidarity,
Kiri Rupiah & Luke Feltham [Subscribe now]( Enjoy The Ampersand? Share it with your friends [Share]( [Share]( [Tweet]( [Tweet]( [Forward]( [Forward]( [Share]( [Share]( Copyright © 2021 Mail & Guardian Media LTD, All rights reserved.
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