With the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control is in charge of
testing and confirming the number of infected persons in the country, the
agency seems compromised as data are being hidden from the public.
While the Nigerian Government may have announced only 65
confirmed cases of Coronavirus so far, the numbers clearly do not reflect the
true state of things in the country, many observers believe.
With the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control is in charge of
testing and confirming the number of infected persons in the country, the agency
seems compromised as data are being hidden from the public.
It was reported that there are more silent cases of
Coronavirus than the figure released by the NCDC is showing.
Also, few number of tests are being conducted with the
agency not attending to complaints made by some Nigerians, who call the NCDC
hotlines to report suspected cases of COVID-19.
The country has five testing centres – two in Lagos and one
each in Abuja, Osun and Edo.
A Twitter user, @UtohPaul, raised the alarm on how people were
not being tested as the NCDC had prioritised politicians and influential
Nigerians for testing.
“There are people waiting to be tested but rather than sort
this backlog out, designated personnel have been deployed to government
officials and other VIPs. This thing will blow in our faces,” he tweeted.
In another tweet, he said that new tests would not be done
as the NCDC was attending to backlogs.
“Just been informed that the test of new cases for the
#COVID19NIGERIA will have to wait a while as they're attending to a backlog.
The exception is if the case is severe,” his tweet read.
As at March 25, only 178 tests had been conducted in Nigeria
since the first case was recorded in the country on February 27.
According to the NCDC, 178 subjects were tested in a total
of 16 states – Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Edo, Ekiti, Enugu, FCT, Kano,
Katsina, Lagos, Nasarawa, Ogun, Ondo, Oyo, Rivers and Yobe.
At least 88 tests have been done in Lagos followed by Abuja
with 52 tests.
The two states currently have the highest number of cases
with 32 in Lagos and 10 in Abuja.
As against the deliberate act of not testing people in
Nigeria, the World Health Organisation has called for the mass testing of
people suspected of having the virus.
“You cannot fight a fire blindfolded and we cannot stop this
pandemic if we don’t know who is infected.
“We have a simple message for all countries: test, test,
test. Test every suspected case,” WHO said.
As it stands, there are 2,100 total confirmed Coronavirus
cases in Africa with Sierra Leone, Sao Tome and Principe, Malawi, Comoros,
Lesotho, Botswana, Burundi, and South Sudan yet to record any case of the
COVID-19 virus.
While 101 persons have recovered, 31 deaths have been
recorded on the continent.
There are fears that if the situation remains the same in
Nigeria and more people with suspected cases are denied access to testing, the
spread of the virus could further escalate in the coming days in Africa’s most
populous country.
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