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COVID-19: Tanzania s virus surge dents claims of prayer cure

Coronavirus: Tanzania s COVID-19 surge dents claims of prayer cure

Tanzania has spent more than six months trying to convince the world it has been cured of the coronavirus through prayer, while refusing to take measures to curb its spread.

The country that s rejecting the Covid vaccine

The country that s rejecting the Covid vaccine © BBC Health Minister Dorothy Gwajima (C) held a press conference to demonstrate how to make a vegetable smoothie that she said, without providing evidence, would protect against coronavirus For months Tanzania s government has insisted the country was free from Covid-19 - so there are no plans for vaccination. The BBC s Dickens Olewe has spoken to one family mourning the death of a husband and father suspected of having had the disease. The fear is that amid the denial, there are many more unacknowledged victims of this highly contagious virus. A week after Peter - not his real name - arrived home from work with a dry cough and loss of taste, he was taken to hospital, where he died within hours. He had not been tested for Covid. But then, according to Tanzania s government, which has not published data on the coronavirus for months, the country is Covid-19-free .

Tanzania minister: No interest in procuring COVID -19 vaccines

Health Minister Dorothy Gwajima told a press conference in the capital, Dodoma, on Monday that the ministry has no plans to receive vaccines for COVID-19. Any vaccines must receive ministry approval. It is not clear when any vaccines might arrive, though Tanzania is eligible for the COVAX global effort aimed at delivering doses to low- and middle-income countries. The health minister insisted Tanzania is safe. During a presentation in which she and others didn t wear face masks, she encouraged the public to improve hygiene practices including the use of sanitizers but also steam inhalation which has been dismissed by health experts elsewhere as a way to kill the coronavirus.

No interest in procuring COVID -19 vaccines - Tanzania s health ministry says

Tanzania’s health ministry says it has no plans in place to accept COVID-19 vaccines, just days after the president of the country of 60 million people expressed doubt about the vaccines without offering evidence. Health Minister Dorothy Gwajima told a press conference in the capital, Dodoma, on Monday that “the ministry has no plans to receive vaccines for COVID-19 .” Any vaccines must receive ministry approval. It is not clear when any vaccines might arrive, though Tanzania is eligible for the COVAX global effort aimed at delivering doses to low- and middle-income countries. The health minister insisted Tanzania is safe. During a presentation in which she and others didn’t wear face masks, she encouraged the public to improve hygiene practices including the use of sanitizers but also steam inhalation which has been dismissed by health experts elsewhere as a way to kill the coronavirus.

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