East
African Community Secretariat, Arusha, Tanzania, 13 July 2015: The East
African Community (EAC) has deployed Emergency Regional Medical and
Public Health Support Teams to the Refugee Camps hosting refugees from
Burundi in Kigoma Region in Tanzania and at the Mahama Main Refugee Camp
and the surrounding local host communities in Kirehe and Bugesera
Districts in the Eastern Province of Rwanda.
The
deployment has brought together over one hundred (100) medical
specialist doctors and other health workers drawn from the East African
Community Secretariat, the EAC Partner States’ National Referral
Hospitals, the East, Central and Southern Africa Health Community
(ECSA)-Health Community Secretariat, the United Nations High Commission
for Refugees (UNHCR), the International Federation of Red Cross and the
Red Crescent (IFRCRC), the Tanzania Red Cross Society (TRCS), Medicines
Sans Frontieres (MSF) to join their local counterparts and other health
care workers based in Kigoma Region in Tanzania from 5 to 11 July 2015,
and in the Eastern Province of Rwanda from 13 to 17 July 2015, to offer a
wide range of services that include; Obstetrics and Gynaecology,
Paediatrics and Child Health, General (Internal) Medicine, General
Surgery, Orthopeadic Surgery, Ophthalmology/Eye Surgery, Oncology,
Nutrition, Neurosurgery, Dental and Oral Health Surgery, Ear, Nose and
Throat Surgery, among others.
According
to the Secretary General of the East African Community, Amb. Dr.
Richard Sezibera, the deployment of the Health Emergency Support Teams
is based on Article 118 (a) of the Treaty for the Establishment of the
East African Community with respect to regional cooperation in health
activities whereby Partner States undertake to, among others; take joint
action towards the prevention and control of communicable and
non-communicable diseases and to control pandemics and epidemics of
communicable and vector-borne diseases such as HIV-AIDS, cholera,
malaria, hepatitis and yellow fever that might endanger the health and
welfare of the residents of the Partner States, and to co-operate in
facilitating mass immunization and other public health community
campaigns.
Prior
to the deployment, a joint technical team of health experts from the EAC
Secretariat; ECSA Health Community Secretariat; UNHCR; IFRCRC; TRCS;
MSF; and from the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania
conducted a Rapid Public Health Needs Assessment of the affected
Burundian Refugees and the local host communities in Kigoma region of
Tanzania from 8 to 10 June 2015.
A
similar Rapid Public Health Needs Assessment was carried out in Eastern
Province of Rwanda from 15 to 19 June 2015 by same joint technical team
of health experts to assess and document additional technical, financial
and material resources required for further additional medical and
public health support in the affected areas.
According
to reports from the EAC Teams on the ground, 75,768 Burundian refugees
had been registered at Nyarugusu Refugee Camp as of Thursday 9 July
2015, of which 60% were Women and Children. In the Eastern Province of
Rwanda, there were 29,089 persons registered at Mahama Refugee Camp as
of Wednesday 8 July 2015, of which 14,438 were females, 14,650 males and
5,981 children.
The
refugee population and the local host communities in Kigoma Region in
Tanzania have already experienced massive outbreaks of over
five-thousand (5,000) diarrhoea-related diseases including thirty four
(34) confirmed cases of cholera infections with four (4) deaths – two
Burundians and two local Tanzanians and other outbreaks of various
communicable diseases. Currently, over a period of four (4) days from 5
to 9 July 2015, a rapid influx of additional 2,646 Burundian Asylum
Seekers/Refugees were received and registered at the Nyarugusu Main
Refugee Camp in Kaulu District of Kigoma Region of Tanzania.
Since
the arrival of the first group of thirty-six (36) Burundian Refugees at
the Nyarugusu Main Refugee Camp on 26 April 2015, the number of
Burundian refugees registers at the camp rose rapidly to 54,000 as of 10
June 2015 at the time which the EAC conducted the rapid medical and
public health needs assessment in the area and an additional 22,768 new
arrivals came in over a period of 30 days as of 9 July 2015. There have
been 910 new babies born at the camp since April 2015 and 86 Burundian
refugees have died at the camp since April 2015 up-to 9 July 2015. In
addition, there are a total of 787 special needs persons among the
Burundian refugee population and these vulnerable group comprise elderly
persons, people with disabilities and orphaned children.
According
to Dr. Stanley Sonoiya, the Principal Health Officer at the East
African Community Secretariat, who is coordinating the Regional Medical
and Public Health Emergency Support Teams, the medical and public health
needs of the Refugees were “overwhelming because of the large numbers
of the very sick and weak populations which have encountered outbreaks
of various communicable diseases and many more were suffering from
chronic illnesses due to various non-communicable diseases. These were
being aggravated by the displacements, deprivations, lack of access to
adequate and regular health care and also lack of medicines and poor
nutrition as well as poor public health and sanitation facilities”.
Dr.
Sonoiya notes that the situation requires a very large scale joint EAC
regional inter-governmental and international multi-agency coordination
and resource mobilization to be deployed to meet the required immediate
and long-term medical and public health needs, including support for
referrals and treatment of serious acute and chronic illnesses which
require medical specialized investigations, diagnosis and proper health
care management at various national referral hospitals in the EAC
region.
The
EAC official has recommended that the current adverse and serious
medical and public health situation of the Refugees should be considered
and discussed by the relevant EAC Policy Organs and other stakeholders
and partners in order to find more sustainable interventions and support
in the immediate period, short-term and long-term as may be applicable.
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