The Economist - UK (2022-03-19)

(Antfer) #1
The EconomistMarch19th 2022 MiddleEast&Africa 45

Covid-19vaccination

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t islittleovera yearsincethefirstdos­
es oflife­savingvaccinesweredelivered
to AfricaundertheCovid­19vaccinesGlo­
bal  Access Facility (covax), a scheme
aimedathelpingpoorercountriesgetin­
oculated.Yetwhatshouldhavebeena cele­
brationoftheregion’sfastest­evervaccine
rollout—with 400m doses jabbed into
waitingarms—wasinsteadmarredbydis­
appointment at how much more could
havebeenachieved.
AsofMarch15th,nolessthan57%of
world’spopulationhasbeenfullyvaccinat­
edagainstcovid.YetinAfricathatshare
fallsto13%,accordingtoAfricacdc, the
continent’s main public­health body. A
yearagomany African countriesrightly
complainedthattheyhadbeenpushedto
thebackofthequeueasrichercountries
boughtupmostoftheworld’svaccinesand
producingcountriesbannedexports.
Now supplies are no longer a con­
straint.InJanuarycovaxhad436mdoses
toallocate,butreceivedrequestsforjust
100mdoses,thefirsttimethatsupplyhas
outstrippeddemand.It hasalsosteppedup
its deliveries. According to the World
HealthOrganisation(who), thenumberof
dosesshippedeverymonthtoAfricadou­
bledbetweenNovemberandJanuary.
Insteadofcomplainingaboutnotget­
ting vaccines, some countries are now
protestingthattheyarebeingdrownedina
delugeofthestuffandareunabletouseit
all.LastmonthAfricacdcappealedtodo­
norstostaggerthesupplyoftheirshots.
“Wehavenotaskedthemtopausethedo­


nations,buttoco­ordinatewithussothat
thenewdonationsarriveina waysothat
countriescanusethem,”saidJohnNken­
gasong,thedirectorofAfricacdc.
Increaseddeliveriesareexposinglogis­
ticaldefectsindistributionwithincoun­
tries,whileweakhealth­caresystemshave
beenunabletojabdosesintoarmsasfast
astheygetthem.AcrossAfricaasa whole
just62%ofdeliveredvaccineshavebeen
administeredand 29 countrieshaveused
lessthanhalfoftheirsupplies,saysthe
who. Amongtheworstlaggards arethe
DemocraticRepublicofCongo,whichhas
used15%ofitsconsignmentsandjabbed
lessthan2%ofitseligiblepopulation,and
Burundi,whichhasusedlessthan2%.
Alsohiddenintheaveragesarebiggaps
invaccinationratesbetweencitiesandthe
countryside.Althoughcontinent­wideda­
ta arenot available,Githinji Gitahi, the
chiefexecutiveofficerofAmrefHealthAf­
rica,anngo,saysthistrendisclearacross
manycountries,includingGhana,Kenya,
Rwanda and Tanzania. In Kenya51% of
adultsinNairobi,thecapital,hadbeenful­
lyvaccinatedbyMarch16th.ButinMande­
racounty,a poorsemi­aridregionnextto
the border with Somalia, only10% had
beenfullyjabbed.
Partofthereasonislogistical.Freezers
forstoringvaccinesareinshortsupply.But
thisshouldbesurmountable.TakeUgan­
da.ByNovemberjust14%ofitseligible
population hadreceivedtheirfirst dose.
Butina pushsupportedbydonorsinclud­
ingtheAmericangovernment,itbumped
thatrateupto47%injustsixweeks.InIvo­
ryCoast,wheremanypeoplewerenervous
aboutthejab,thegovernmentbumpedup
thevaccinationratefrom22%to36%inthe
monthofDecemberbyrunningradiocam­
paignstoallaypeople’sfears.Thesespeedy
successessuggestthatinmanyplacesthe
biggestshortageisnotoffreezersornur­
ses,butofzealonthepartoftheauthori­
tiestogooutandgetinjecting. n

C APE TOWN
Why Africatrailsinadministeringjabs

Covid-19vaccinations,March16th 2022
Totalpopulationwithatleastonedose,%

510 20 40 60 80 90 100
No reported
Source:OurWorldinData vaccinations

Burundi0.1

Kenya21.6
Rwanda68.0

Tanzania6.0

Ghana28.3

UnitedStates6.9 China 88.2

Somalia 9.3

S


tate-licensedprostitutioninTuni­
sia dates back at least as far as the
Ottoman conquest nearly half a millen­
nium ago—and has persisted to the
present day. In 2011 at least 300 sex
workers were operating legally under
the government’s auspices. Almost
every big city had a licensed brothel,
regulated by the interior ministry’s
bureau of morals. Prostitutes could be
registered as fonctionnaires—civil ser­
vants. The system, however, is being
phased out—much to the detriment of
the prostitutes.
The first setback was the overthrow
of the authoritarian but largely secular
government in 2011, since it empowered
Islamists with puritanical attitudes.
Most brothels were forced to close. Only
two well­known ones are thought to
have survived the Islamist purge: one in
the city of Sfax, the other in Sidi Ab­
dallah Guech, the red­light district of
Tunis, the capital. 
The sex business was buffeted even
more fiercely in 2020 when a wholesale
lockdown in the face of covid­19 meant
that the remaining brothels had to
close. Women who worked in them
were forced to ply their trade illicitly, in
public parks and hotels. They often
became prey to exploitation, extortion
and violence at the hands of police,
pimps and criminals.
“There were reasons why we pre­
ferred working with the government,”
says a prostitute from Sfax. Even if the
pay was less generous in a licensed
brothel, where the going rate was 10.5
Tunisian dinars ($3.60) per client, it
was preferable to the 30 dinars you
might make on your own, because it
was safer. “At least in the brothel I had
police protection. They could control
the clients and make sure they used
condoms,” she says. 
With state oversight unclear, many
Tunisian prostitutes now rely on volun­
tary associations to safeguard their
health and welfare. “Rapes and attacks
against women have risen since the
brothels closed,” says Bouthayna Aous­
saoui, who runs an organisation that
helps the women. In 2018 a survey
found that around 6% of Tunisia’s sex
workers had hiv. By last year, after the
brothels had closed, the figure had
risen to 11%, she says. The puritans,
predictably enough, had merely made
matters worse.

PayingforsexinTunisia

Game over


T UNIS
Licensed prostitution is banned
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