The president admits there may be “technical errors” , having previously suggested people could pray the disease away.
Monday 4 May 2020 13:54, UK
The accuracy of coronavirus tests used in Tanzania has been questioned by the country’s president after a goat and a papaya both tested positive for the disease.
President John Magufuli, whose government has already faced criticism over its handling of coronavirus outbreak and has previously asked people to pray the disease away, said the kits had “technical errors”.Sponsored link
He said the COVID-19 tests had been imported from abroad, although he did not give further details.
The president claimed he asked security forces to check the quality of the kits and that they randomly obtained several non-human samples, including from a papaya, a goat and a sheep, but had assigned them human names and ages.
The samples were then submitted to Tanzania‘s laboratory to test for the coronavirus, with the lab technicians deliberately not made aware of their origins.Advertisement
Mr Magufuli said the return of positive results on the goat and papaya indicated some people were testing positive despite not having the virus.
“There is something happening. I said before we should not accept that every aid is meant to be good for this nation,” he said, adding that the kits should be investigated.
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Tanzania had recorded 480 cases of COVID-19 and 17 deaths as of Sunday.
However, unlike most other African countries, its government sometimes goes for days without offering updates – with officials having last done so on Wednesday,
Mr Magufuli also said he was sending a plane to collect a herbal cure being promoted by Madagascar’s president.
The mix has not yet undergone internationally recognised scientific testing.Africa is poorly prepared to deal with COVID-19 but ingenuity offers hopeTens of millions of Africans who live their lives on the edge will soon face an even harder battle to survive
“I’m communicating with Madagascar,” he said.
“They have got a medicine. We will send a flight there and the medicine will be brought in the country so that Tanzanians too can benefit.”
COVID-19 infections and deaths reported across Africa have been relatively low compared with the Europe, the US and parts of Asia although the continent has extremely low levels of testing – with rates of only around 500 per million people.
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