HOMEF calls on African civil society to unite and closely monitor the way COVID-19 and its related policies are evolving in Africa

Lagos (Nigeria), 22nd April 2020.  

COVID-19 has gripped the world and its people in a crisis that has no precedent in the current Century. On 11th of March 2020 the WHO declared the outbreak a pandemic after the disease had reached 114 countries, with more than 118,000 cases, and 4291 deaths. Today there are over two million cases and over 100,000 deaths globally.

“With over hundreds of confirmed  cases and increasing number of deaths,, the Nigerian government and citizens must see the pandemic as a huge threat and must keep implementing the response measures in ways that are suitably adapted to our society’s context,” said Nnimmo Bassey, Director of Health of Mother Earth Foundation,  based in Benin City, Nigeria.

In Africa the crisis has highlighted the needs of our countries, as well the deficiencies of our socioeconomic and development models. Multilateral institutions and foreign countries have already started injecting billions of dollars into the continent, in the form of credits, loans and grants. This crisis has shown as well that our health systems are not adequately adapted to a pandemic like this.

 “Our health systems are not equipped to respond to the needs of the people most in need in Nigeria and in many other parts of the world. Marking this year’s Earth Day in a pandemic should help us reflect that humans must learn to live in harmony with nature and desist from manipulations of viruses and other living organisms,” says Joyce Ebebeinwe, Biosafety Officer of HOMEF.

HOMEF presents a new publication on the Coronavirus and Africa entitled “Who Benefits from Corona? A breakfast with Mr. Gates”. It provides a detailed overview of the African scenario with regard to the pandemic, describing the finances around this crisis and the main features surrounding COVID-19. The book calls for an urgent change of the current socioeconomic and development model, and a shift to being a continent that refuses to be used for risky experimentations whether for financial speculation or for purposes of “depopulation”. The book is a Manifesto for African people. 

The statemen t concluded: “We need to be confident that COVID-19 will be beaten. This crisis will show the determination, strength and resilience of African health workers operating in difficult circumstances. It will also show the social webs of support that sustains our peoples, and which must not be disrupted by contrived policy measures. African civil society needs to unite and closely monitor COVID-19 and its related policies on our continent. With all the help received we need to make our institutions, particularly those in the health sector stronger and resilient. The support must also not drag more countries into debt. We cannot allow that when the COVID-19 pandemic ends, our continent continues to be in the same dependency scenario that we are in today. We want our people to stop living in a survival mode. We demand the right to universal public health and assured basic income implemented all over the continent”.

For more information:

Nnimmo Bassey, T: @NnimmoB and [email protected]

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