Tanzania’s president is finally acknowledging that his country has a coronavirus problem after claiming for months that the disease had been defeated by prayer.
President John Magufuli on Sunday urged citizens of the East African country to take precautions and even wear face masks – but only locally made ones.
Over the course of the pandemic he has expressed wariness about foreign-made goods, including COVID-19 vaccines.
The president’s comments came days after the country mourned the death of one of its highest-profile politicians, the vice president of the semi-autonomous island region of Zanzibar, whose political party had earlier said he had COVID-19.
The president’s chief secretary also died in recent days, though the cause was not revealed.
Magufuli, speaking at the chief secretary’s funeral in a nationally televised broadcast on Friday, urged the nation to participate in three days of prayer for unspecified “respiratory” illnesses that had become a challenge in the country.
Churchgoer Edita Ndugur said on Monday that the president’s words had “given us hope as Tanzanians.”
“Yesterday’s statement by the president has strengthened me and we have received it well,” she said shortly before entering Dar es Salaam Pentecostal Church for an afternoon service.
Tanzania has not updated its number of coronavirus infections since April as the president has insisted COVID-19 had been defeated.
The official number of infections remains at just 509, but residents report that many people have become ill with breathing difficulties and hospitals have seen a rise in patients for “pneumonia.”
The director-general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has added his voice to growing calls for Tanzania to acknowledge COVID-19.
Tedros in a statement on Saturday called Tanzania’s situation ‘very concerning’ and urged Magufuli’s government to take ‘robust action.’
Source: Africanews