In Yemen, coronavirus is killing off the educated elite
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Already ravaged by war and famine, Yemen is suffering another blow to its future as the coronavirus kills off dozens of the country's top public servants, academics and the most educated.
While a lack of widespread testing is masking the true scale of the crisis, scores of doctors, academics, engineers, politicians, judges, lawyers and business leaders, as well as high-ranking members of the Houthi militia, are thought to be among the dead as the virus spreads.
It is a devastating blow for a county that has already suffered six years of civil war, further scuppering hopes for recovery as the government and institutions will struggle to fill the skills gap. The loss of leading members of society has also taken a toll on public morale.
The country has limited capacity to test for the virus, but those who have died from symptoms conducive with Covid-19 include: a number of prominent members of parliament; lawyer Abdulaziz Al Samawi, who helped to found Yemen’s Bar Association and represented the Al Qaeda members accused of the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole off the coast of Aden; and revered “great poet” Hassan Abdullah Al Sharafi.
Around 30 professors from Sanaa, Aden and Taiz universities have also died, as well as leading consultants in ophthalmology, gynaecology and other medical fields.
High-ranking military commanders in the Yemeni army who have died include commander of the Marib special forces, Col Mohammed Al Hajwri.
Several sources said that a number of members of the internationally-recognised government’s health ministry have gone into isolation after contracting the virus.
The official number of coronavirus cases in Yemen stands at just over 500 and almost 130 deaths. An estimate on the actual number of cases is hard to give, but according to a local union, at least 57 doctors and pharmacists alone have died.
Health professionals in Yemen said the virus has rampaged across the country and is rife in Hodeidah, Hadramout, Ibb, Taiz, Aden, Al Dhalea, and other governates, with the epicentre in the capital, Sanaa.
“There are a number of doctors who have died – just one hour ago I was informed that general surgery specialist Dr Mohammed Ahmed Sayed died today due to coronavirus in Al Hikma hospital,” Dr Abdulrahim Alsamie, chairman of Al Thawra Hospital in Taiz said over the phone on Thursday.
Taiz is Yemen’s most populous governorate and is among those with the highest number of recorded cases.
“When the community sees the highly-educated, especially those who are able to isolate from the virus, are affected, it sends a bad message,” said Dr Alsamie.
He said that there was an added problem when those people are health workers: “the first thing that comes to their minds is ‘if those on the frontline are dying in front of us, what chance do we have?’ It’s very bad for the community.”
In tandem with the pandemic, an outbreak of cholera, with 115,000 suspected cases since January, has left the country struggling to cope.
There is not enough personal protective equipment and facilities are ill-prepared.
“There is not enough equipment in hospitals and a lot of crowding,” said the General Director of Hodeidah Health Office, Dr Ali Al Ahda.
“This week, a doctor in Hodeidah called me and said there are no masks or gloves, and they have to buy them themselves because there is no official money for them.”
The north of the country, which is controlled by the Iran-backed Houthi militia and includes Sanaa, is facing one of the toughest battles with the virus. The main cemetery in the capital has reportedly had to close temporarily as it was inundated with bodies.
If the dead are tested at all, the results are not made public.
Discussion of the pandemic is suppressed and rumours have made people with symptoms scared to visit hospitals.
“In Houthi areas because patients are not allowed to talk about the virus. People who say, for example, on Facebook ‘I am sick and have a fever and suspect I have coronavirus’ they are told to delete the post,” said Dr Al Ahda.
A widely-spread rumour believed by many – but denied by the Houthis – is that the rebels have given hospitals orders to kill suspected Covid-19 patients with a lethal injection, meaning many do not want to seek treatment.
Dr Alsamie said that people in Taiz even refuse to believe that the pandemic has reached the country.
“They say it is a seasonal virus – they don’t want to hear that there is coronavirus,” he said.
“They don’t have the ability to stay home, they don’t have food and they don’t have security. They earn their money daily and many live off $1.
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