Health

Taliban's botched COVID-19 response leads to spread of virus in militant bastions

AFP

In this photograph taken May 9 a medic wearing personal protective equipment takes a swab sample from a suspected COVID-19 coronavirus patient at the Afghan-Japan Communicable Disease Hospital in Kabul. [Wakil Kohsar/ AFP]

In this photograph taken May 9 a medic wearing personal protective equipment takes a swab sample from a suspected COVID-19 coronavirus patient at the Afghan-Japan Communicable Disease Hospital in Kabul. [Wakil Kohsar/ AFP]

KUNDUZ -- The Taliban boasted of their readiness to fight the deadly coronavirus when it first reached Afghanistan, but now the insurgents are struggling to curb its spread in their strongholds.

For months, Habib Rahman, a resident of a Taliban-controlled area in the south of the country, has been unable to test whether his persistent cough is due to the virus.

"I have a cough, fever and chest pain," said Rahman, 32, who owns a grocery store in Helmand Province.

"There is neither a centre here to diagnose or treat coronavirus patients nor any effort to create awareness of the disease," he said.

The Taliban posted this photo May 27 on Twitter saying the group launched an anti-COVID-19 campaign in Kunduz Province without providing more details. [File]

The Taliban posted this photo May 27 on Twitter saying the group launched an anti-COVID-19 campaign in Kunduz Province without providing more details. [File]

Afghanistan has more than 18,000 confirmed cases -- including thousands in Taliban-controlled territories, according to official figures.

But an overall shortage of testing kits and of medical supplies and a dilapidated health system are compounding problems in tackling the spread, said Ahmad Saeedi, an independent analyst.

Years of war have left Afghanistan with a crumbling health sector, hampering the government's fight against COVID-19.

In an attempt to bolster their narrative that they can run Afghanistan better than the struggling administration, the Taliban launched a campaign to tackle the virus in March.

They posted images online showing insurgents distributing masks and soap to villagers -- albeit without any social distancing.

In one image, masked militants wearing white protective suits check residents' temperatures and explain about personal hygiene as a machine gun is seen on a nearby table.

Disbelief about virus

The virus entered Afghanistan as infected migrants returned from neighbouring Iran, the region's worst-hit country, and the Taliban ordered hundreds of returnees into quarantine.

In some areas they controlled, the insurgents allowed government health officials to monitor the virus's spread -- something rare for a group blamed for the deaths of dozens of medics over the years.

But in recent weeks, residents from provinces such as Kunduz, Helmand, Uruzgan and Kandahar -- where the Taliban hold sway over large areas -- complain they have been abandoned to their fate.

In Kunduz, where the militants fought a fierce night battle before a short nationwide ceasefire last month, insurgents have barred medics.

"They said they would handle the virus on their own," said Sebghatullah, a doctor from a nearby district who is worried about the residents' lack of awareness when it comes to personal hygiene.

Haji Qudratullah, a resident of Helmand, said he recently saw a group of Taliban fighters film a promotional video at a neighbourhood clinic, but they never returned.

"I have not seen anybody do anything to raise awareness about the virus here," he said.

Taliban commanders insist they are helping fight the virus.

"People who are suffering from high fever, cough and body pain... are taken to Tirin Kot," said Hafez Mohammad, a Taliban commander, referring to the capital of Uruzgan Province.

Even during the Taliban's rule in the late 1990s, Afghanistan's health sector was marred by poor infrastructure, little international aid and underpaid medics.

The disease is also sweeping through the Taliban itself, with several high-level militants believed to be sick with COVID-19, according to international media reports. The group deny any of their senior leaders are ill.

'Transgression against religion'

In his annual message marking the Eid holiday, the Taliban's top leader, Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada, urged the public to seek medical help for the disease.

But the virus was caused by humanity's "transgression against Allah's religion", he insisted.

To stop the virus, Afghans should "seek forgiveness from Allah and stop violating his commands", Haibatullah said.

The militants have distributed booklets explaining how to prevent infections, said Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid.

"Our mobile teams, using motorcycles, are taking people with symptoms to the hospitals," Mujahid told AFP.

The insurgents face an uphill task, say knowledgeable observers.

"There is no ambulance or professional team that can take their samples or treat these suspected patients," health official Hamid Ahmadi said.

Residents, meanwhile, say they have little information on what to do.

"Many people are complaining from flu-like symptoms... we don't know why," said Haji Abdul Bari in Helmand.

"Nobody has told us about the symptoms [of the coronavirus]. We don't know anything about it," he said.

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Taliban leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada is said to have died of coronavirus. Is this true?

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Taliban do not have as many facilities as possible to provide health services to the people. They do not pay salary to their fighters who are fighting against the Afghan government in the ranks of this group. Not all the people who work with Taliban receive money. They work voluntarily with great honesty, but those who work in the Afghan government, in addition to being paid well by the government, they take bribe, embezzle, betray, release the criminals, are involved in drug trafficking, and don’t work honestly. That is why the Afghan government is powerless and incompetent. If the international community and the US government have given this much money to Taliban as they gave to the Afghan government, Afghanistan could be like Paris now, because no one among Taliban steals money and their officials do not build high and luxurious houses for themselves. They do not live in luxury. The highest ranking Taliban official lives in a muddy house and has a very simple and ordinary life. They consider themselves servants of the people, but Afghan government officials consider themselves masters of the people. The monthly salary of a very ordinary presidential adviser is equal to the four-year salary of a teacher. This is cruel. For the sake of God, the salary of a teacher is one hundred dollar. It's a shame. If you tell someone abroad that in Afghanistan a teacher is paid a hundred dollar a month, he might laugh at you. A teacher who is the foundation layer of a society lives on a hu

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