Somalia launches first public oxygen plant amid surging cases of Covid-1

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Somaliland has inaugurated its first public oxygen facility on Thursday, and is expected to restore hope for a country which is struggling to provide treatments for Covid-19 patients.

The new facility in Mogadishu was purchased for 282, 000 euro ($240, 000) from Turkey by Hormud Salaam Foundation by country’s giant telecom company-Hormud.

It will be installed at Benadir Maternity and Children Hospital, where the foundation has funded the repair of its Covid-19 ward.

The wing and the hospital’s outer wall were partially destroyed during a nearby attack in July by Islamist al-Shabaab militants, who are fighting to overthrow the government.

Medical oxygen production needs experts to operate and maintain equipment. It also requires reliable electricity and water supplies, which most Somali public hospitals do not have. Other countries, such as India, suffered severe oxygen shortages during surges in COVID-19 infections, forcing desperate families of patients to pay exorbitant prices for cylinders.

“One cylinder of oxygen usually costs around $50 in Somalia but can reach up to $400 or $500 (at private hospitals) because of the shortage,” said Abdullahi Nur Osman, CEO of Hormuud’s foundation. He said the oxygen will be distributed among the public hospitals in the capital Mogadishu free of charge.

As of Wednesday, Somalia had reported nearly 20,000 COVID-19 cases and 1,100 deaths, according to the World Health Organization, but figures could be far higher due to inadequate testing and unreported deaths.

Only 1% of Somalia’s 15 million citizens are fully vaccinated, reflecting inequities in vaccine distribution that the World Health Organization warns will prolong the pandemic, which has already claimed nearly 5 million lives.

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