Zim COVID-19 isolation centres leave a lot to be desired

Source: Zim COVID-19 isolation centres leave a lot to be desired | Newsday (News) ZIMBABWE’S response to the COVID-19 outbreak came under the spotlight after returnees from the United Kingdom were this week put under a two-week quarantine at Belvedere Technical Teachers’ College in Harare, an isolation centre with no running water and where people […]

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Source: Zim COVID-19 isolation centres leave a lot to be desired | Newsday (News)

ZIMBABWE’S response to the COVID-19 outbreak came under the spotlight after returnees from the United Kingdom were this week put under a two-week quarantine at Belvedere Technical Teachers’ College in Harare, an isolation centre with no running water and where people have to share toilets and bathrooms, something that is not in line with the World Health Organisation guidelines in dealing with COVID-19.

NewsDay Comment

Although government tried to play down the real situation by accusing the returnees of demanding to be quarantined at a cosy hotel in the city centre, what is clear is that our isolation centres leave a lot to be desired and this is something that government is duty bound to act on as a matter of urgency.

The fact that the returnees have been using one water tap without sanitisation also defeats the purpose of quarantining them and, indeed, such a situation is more likely to achieve the opposite of what is intended.

Such loopholes are indeed a cause for concern with regards to our entire approach in dealing with this global pandemic that has accounted for thousands of fatalities across then world.

Last week, some returnees from Botswana isolated at a high school in Plumtree protested against the conditions they were subjected to and were later transferred to Bulawayo. All this further confirms that our approach indeed lacks the seriousness that this situation demands.

We might as well take this opportunity to remind political leaders and policymakers that when it comes to COVID-19, no one is safe no matter their wealth or influence. You are only as safe as the next citizen. Investing in public health facilities tasked to deal with this pandemic must, therefore, be prioritised. This includes the health institutions and isolation facilities.

Even as we fight this pandemic, basic human rights including access to shelter, water and health must be prioritised. It is wrong to treat people in isolation centres as criminals or subhuman.

Surely, things such as beds and linen, toilets with running water and clean bathrooms are the most basic needs. At a time when there is need to disseminate correct information regarding COVID-19 and the national response, it is also paramount for our government officials not to peddle falsehoods concerning these returnees.

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Editorial Comment: Decentralised tobacco floors way to go

Source: Editorial Comment: Decentralised tobacco floors way to go | Herald (Opinion) Decentralising tobacco auction floors brings markets closer to the growers, translating into transport savings. The tobacco selling season was initially scheduled to kick off in mid-March, but was postponed to last Monday. But that, too, was put off because of the two-week extension […]

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Source: Editorial Comment: Decentralised tobacco floors way to go | Herald (Opinion)

Decentralising tobacco auction floors brings markets closer to the growers, translating into transport savings.

The tobacco selling season was initially scheduled to kick off in mid-March, but was postponed to last Monday. But that, too, was put off because of the two-week extension to the lockdown.

A new date for the start of the marketing season will be announced.

A consistent outcry from tobacco growers has been the prohibitive cost of transport. Therefore, decentralisation of the auction floors for the growers, means a reduction in the cost of transporting the golden leaf to the market.

The cost of transporting the crop to Harare, for example, from the main growing regions in Mashonaland Central, East and West provinces has been one of the factors behind the migration of growers from tobacco to other crops.

One of the positive outcomes of decentralisation will be de-congestion of the auction floors.

A distressing spectacle at the auction floors, annually, is that of tobacco growers — some of them with babies — spending days and nights at the auction floors, where water, showers and ablution facilities are deplorable and inadequate.

In fact, it is a miracle that despite the outbreaks of cholera and typhoid, the tobacco auction floors have not been sites of diseases.

The advent of the global pandemic — Covid-19 — makes it imperative to decentralise and de-congest the auction floors. 

Zimbabwe is far from being out of the woods and it is precisely for this reason that the Government extended the nationwide lockdown by a further two weeks to May 3, 2020.

Decentralisation under the circumstances seeks primarily to achieve two objectives. The first is to safeguard the health and lives of people by ensuring that everything possible is done to minimise gatherings where there is risk of exposure to and contracting the virus.

The second is about protecting the production of the country’s major source of foreign currency earnings — tobacco.

Zimbabwe is considered the fifth largest producer of flue-cured Virginia tobacco in the world. It is the largest producer of the crop in Africa.

While decentralisation is being implemented, farmer organisations must assist in the smooth process of transporting their crop to the auction floors by educating members on booking requirements prior to delivery to the floors.

Farmer organisations need to take a leaf from the Commercial Farmers’ Union (CFU), which created associations at district level designed to strengthen the capacity of their members so they could expand and improve their production.

In this regard, all farmer organisations need to ensure greater involvement of agricultural extension officers in their districts so that they register improved quality crop.   

Twenty years after the historic Land Reform Programme, booking deliveries to the auction floors should be standard practice.

In recent years there has been the emergence of private transporters, thinking outside the box and offering services for uplifting the tobacco crop from the farm to the auction floors.

Farmer organisations need to embrace these initiatives because not only do they de-congest traffic at the auction floors, they take off a huge burden from the growers.

In due course, there should be a situation where the grower does not necessarily require to visit the auction floor to see how his/her crop is being sold.

There are precedents in the marketing of cotton and sugar cane.

On the other hand, banks need to be alive to the criticality of disbursing farmers’ earnings timeously thus enabling growers to meet/service their obligations expeditiously.

The payment procedures for tobacco growers this year will be on the basis of 50 percent foreign currency with the balance in local currency on the prevailing interbank rate.

Last year the payment process became a bone of contention with growers dissatisfied with prices as well as the disconnect between the announced foreign currency component due to growers and what they eventually ended up getting.

There were also delays in paying farmers, all adding up to demotivating and in extreme cases, migration of producers to other crops.

Tobacco production has been one of the success stories in empowering previously economically excluded populations from participating in this economic activity. Towns such as Mvurwi and Rusape continue to register growth on the back of tobacco production.

Growing tobacco has transformed lives of many people and it is evidence of changed lifestyles of growers that saw the annual crop production recovering rapidly from the setback that the sector experienced soon after the implementation of the Land Reform Programme.

While emphasis is on decentralisation, all players should be making efforts designed to ensure that growers will be able to go back to the land and increase their hectarage during the 2020-2021 season. This is especially important because a contented grower will deliver a better crop and a quality crop will fetch higher prices for the trader and the grower.

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