In front of this vaccination center in Johannesburg, the
queue was getting longer and longer until a few weeks ago. Today, only three
people are there, lost in this huge gymnasium requisitioned since the beginning
of the mass vaccination in May, their sleeves rolled up for the injection.
Parked in front of the entrance, Muzi, a 32-year-old minibus
cab driver, looks at it with a bad eye. "I am very afraid of the
vaccine," he tells AFP. He then tells of knowing a woman, who he says died
from being vaccinated: "She was perfectly fine before".
To date, only 11% of adults in a population of 58 million
are fully immunized. The country officially the most affected in Africa is
currently vaccinating people over 35 years old and is opening up on Friday to
people over 18 years old. South Africa already has more than 2.6 million cases
and nearly 78,700 deaths.
But despite the ever-rising numbers, fewer than 200,000
people a day are coming forward to be vaccinated, below the target of 300,000.
The government plans to vaccinate 28 million people by the end of the year, or
70% of adults.
The country is experiencing "apathy or vaccine
fatigue," Nomafrench Mbombo of the Western Cape provincial health
department warned Thursday.
The government had been roundly criticized for its delay in
getting into the vaccine procurement race. But it has since succeeded in
obtaining tens of millions of doses and South Africa has even become the first
country on the continent to produce vaccines locally.
Lori Bentley, 59, stood in line outside the gym. But in her
family, she is one of the few who believe the vaccine will work. According to
her relatives, scientists "couldn't develop an effective vaccine in such a
short time," she says.
"Sex strike"
The rejection by men in South Africa is of particular
concern, according to a recent study. In the country, 60% of those vaccinated
are women, the Minister of Health recently expressed alarm.
To push men to get vaccinated, the South African poet and
actress Lebogang Mashile has called on South African women to go on a "sex
strike". "For our sake, women must condition +pumpum+ (sex) on
vaccination," she tweeted.
The government, for its part, has attempted a targeted SMS
campaign asking "all men in South Africa to register" for the
vaccine.
But according to health journalist Pontsho Pilane, lack of
trust in the government is also a factor. The authorities, for their part,
accuse the anti-vaccine movement of being responsible for conducting a
misinformation campaign.
According to a study conducted in July by the University of
Johannesburg, skeptics cite three main concerns: side effects, vaccine
effectiveness and distrust of the vaccine and/or institutions.
In vaccination centers that are operating at a trickle, some
caregivers have issued calls to come in for vaccination on social networks. At
the same time, several organizations, including mosques, farms, mines,
pharmacies and insurance companies, have opened vaccination sites to facilitate
access to the vaccine. -AP
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