Doctor who escaped execution to lead Somalia's war against coronavirus

Somali doctor Abdirizak Yusuf Ahmed speaks during an interview with Reuters in his office in Mogadishu. Picture: Feisal Omar/Reuters

Somali doctor Abdirizak Yusuf Ahmed speaks during an interview with Reuters in his office in Mogadishu. Picture: Feisal Omar/Reuters

Published Apr 1, 2020

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Mogadishu - Somali doctor Abdirizak Yusuf

Ahmed has escaped an execution, battled deadly diseases and

treated war victims. Now - at 35 years old - he's been tapped to

lead his nation's response to the coronavirus.

So far, Somalia has reported only three cases. But if the

disease is unleashed, it could spread like wildfire through

camps housing malnourished families who huddle under makeshift

domes built from sticks and rags.

Many of the 2.4 million Somalis displaced by conflict and

other disasters live in such camps. Out of a total population of

15 million, around six million Somalis may not have enough to

eat this year, the United Nations says, weakening their immune

systems and ability to survive the pandemic.

Islamist al Shabaab insurgents also hold parts of southern

Somalia, making it hard for health workers to visit and

impossible to do testing there.

"I have witnessed wars, cholera, dysentery," Ahmed, tall and

bespectacled, told Reuters. "A doctor who fears for his life

cannot save people. I have learned to forget worrying and

instead help rescue people."

A decade ago, al Shabaab seized him as he was trying to stem

a cholera epidemic in territory they held. They had seen a cross

inside his ambulance and - wrongly assuming it meant he was a

foreign spy - arrested him and his team. A phone call from a

high-level contact saved their lives, he said.

SHORTAGE OF BEDS

Right now, Somalia only has about 25 intensive care beds,

110 quarantine beds and 100 treatment beds available, Ahmed

said. More are being built. In the capital, patients at the old

Italian-built maternity Martini Hospital have been moved out to

make way for a new coronavirus ward.

The sound of hammering echoes through its wide, tree-lined

compound as construction workers rush to finish repairs.

The health ministry and prime minister's office have

allocated about $11 million for coronavirus preparation, Ahmed

said. Expenses are high - all medical equipment is imported and

coronavirus tests are sent to Kenya for processing.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has trained 500 health

workers in Somalia since January, said Dr. Mamunur Rahman Malik,

the organisation's country representative.

The WHO also brought in personal protective equipment to

handle the first 300 or 400 cases, Malik added.

Ahmed's biggest worry is that the disease may spread very

fast. Somalia has a tradition of physical greetings, and even

wealthy people are reluctant to quarantine away from family.

Many, like Faduma Abdikadir, simply have nowhere to isolate

themselves.

The 38-year-old mother is sleeping under a tree in a

makeshift camp in the capital Mogadishu with her eight children,

having fled fighting in the countryside.

"Most of the time we use ashes and sand to wash hands. We

are hungry. We beg people to buy water to drink and wash our

hands," she said. 

Reuters

* For the latest on the Covid-19 outbreak visit IOL's  #Coronavirus trend page

** If you think you have been exposed to the Covid-19 virus, please call the government's 24-hour hotline on 0800 029 999

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#coronavirus