OneWorld South Asia Home Global Headlines Tribals at greatest risk from swine flu
OneWorld South Asia OneWorld Network OneWorld South Asia
13 February 2012
Welcome to OneWorld South Asia. Bringing together a network of people and groups working for human rights and sustainable development from across the globe.
To know more about OneWorld South Asia, Click here.
 
OWSA Group Websites
Governance Knowledge Centre
EK duniya anEK awaaz
Climate Change Action
Appropriate Technology Choices
Digital Opportunity Channel
Lifelines
Supported by

Tribals at greatest risk from swine flu

Bookmark 
and Share
01 October 2009
 

A new report says tribals in Australia and Canada are vulnerable to swine flu due to poor health and poverty. The report follows as body bags were sent to native Canadians in Manitoba who have plead the government to send medicines instead.

A report launched yesterday by human rights group Survival International shows that tribal peoples across the world are at greatest risk from swine flu, as many have poor immunity and suffer chronic underlying illnesses.

tribal.jpg
The Matsigenka tribe has already been struck by swine flu/ Photo credit: J Mazower/ Survival

The report, Swine Flu and Tribal Peoples, shows that indigenous peoples in Australia and Canada have been hard hit by the swine flu pandemic, as the majority live in poverty, suffering overcrowding and poor sanitation, and have high rates of chronic illnesses such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity and alcoholism.

The report comes just days after supplies of body bags were delivered to First Nations communities in Manitoba, Canada, along with hand sanitizers and face masks.

'Don't send us body bags'

First Nations communities in the province have seen infection rates of 130 per 100,000 compared with just 24 per 100,000 among the general population. However, although many households do not have access to clean water, the Canadian government delayed sending hand sanitizers to reserve communities, where alcoholism is rife, for fear that people would attempt to ingest the alcohol in them.

Grand Chief David Harper told CBC, "I make a plea to the people of Canada to work with us to ensure the lowest fatalities from this monster virus. Don’t send us body bags. Help us organize; send us medicine."

Armand MacKenzie of the Innu Nation of eastern Canada, said today, "In Canada, I hope that the words 'highest attainable standards of health' mean more than sending body bags to Indigenous First Nations communities. We need a real pandemic plan in partnership with Indigenous First Nations. Not body bags!"

Wake up call

The report also raises concern for isolated tribes who have no immunity to outside diseases and for whom even the common cold can prove fatal. Members of the Matsigenka tribe in the Peruvian Amazon have already been struck by swine flu, leading to fears for the health of neighbouring uncontacted tribes. Any contact with outsiders carrying the virus could devastate entire communities.

Stephen Corry, Director of Survival, said today, "That tribal peoples are worst affected by swine flu comes as no surprise. Years of colonialism and forced assimilation policies have left them in destitution with chronic health problems. This report makes for sober reading but it should also serve as a wake up call to those governments that have ignored the health needs of their most vulnerable populations for too long."

 
Source : Survival
Personal tools
Log in
 
OWSA partner DSDS 2012
 
 
 
 
OneWorld thematic channels and collaborative projects include:
iTrain online open knowledge network tiki the Penguin, Kids Channel