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Perak State Government outrageously insensitive, inefficient and irresponsible in the anti-dengue campaign as it is still talking about establishing a state-wide anti-aedes panel before Chinese New Year when the death toll keeps mounting with another death from Manjoi, Ipoh - the third in the first two weeks of the new year


Media Statement
by Lim Kit Siang

(Petaling Jaya, Friday): The Perak State Government is outrageously insensitive, inefficient and irresponsible in the anti-dengue campaign as it is still talking about establishing a state-wide anti-aedes panel before Chinese New Year when the death toll keeps mounting with another death from Manjoi, Ipoh - the third in the first two weeks of the new year.

Mohamed Fazil Mohd Ismail, 10, Std. IV pupil of Sekolah Kebangsaan Manjoi, died of dengue at Ipoh Hospital on Wednesday - a week after his admission.

His father, Mohd Ismail Mohd Shariff, 33, said his son was first sent to a private clinic when he developed high fever on Jan. 4 and the doctor suspected that he was suffering from dengue.

He took Mohamed Fazil to the Government clinic in Kampung Manjoi where he was told that his son only had high fever. On Jan. 7, he took the boy to the Ipoh General Hospital after he almost collapsed at school. (New Straits Times)

The third dengue death in the Ipoh General Hospital - after Nurul Shazlyn Ab. Fairul Hisman, 2, of Kampung Ahmad Said Tambahan, Ipoh, who died on 3.1.03 and Adam Danial Zarisham, 2, of Kampong Manjoi, Ipoh who died on 7.1.2003 - has confirmed three matters which I had tried to impress on the Health Minister, Datuk Chua Jui Meng and the local authorities in my lonely but so far unsuccessful campaign on the unrecognized dengue epidemic , viz:

  • That Malaysia is facing the worst dengue epidemic which claimed more than 72 lives last year and at least five deaths in the first two weeks of the new year (more serious than the worst dengue year previously in 1998; which reported 27,379 cases and 58 deaths) and the worst is not over;

  • That the government should declare a dengue epidemic and a high-impact IEC or information, education and communication (including media) campaign to create nation-wide alert and awareness of the epidemic as even private practitioners and government doctors are not all sufficiently aware of the dengue epidemic;

  • That urban Malay children are the most vulnerable population group in the epidemic, from the incidence of cases and casualties.

The Perak State Exco member responsible for health, science, technology and environment, Datuk Ho Cheng Wang, is only now talking about setting up a special state panel against aedes mosquitoes before the Chinese New Year in two weeks' time (Berita Harian 16.1.03) when the dengue death toll keeps mounting after months of the dengue epidemic in Ipoh and Perak.

DAP MP for Batu Gajah, Fong Poh Kuan has informed me that for the first two weeks of the month, there were more than 150 dengue cases in the Ipoh General Hospital, averaging more than 10 admissions a day. This has been going on for the past three months, applying only to the Ipoh General Hospital, not taking into account the private Ipoh hospital admissions or admissions to hospitals in other parts of Perak state.

The gravity of the dengue epidemic could be gauged from a comparison with the daily average of six dengue cases for the whole of Perak state (all public and private hospitals) for the first seven months of last year as compared to more than 10 dengue admissions to the Ipoh General Hospital alone for the first two weeks of the year.

The third dengue death from Manjoi, Ipoh this year is a sad reflection of the collective failure of the Health Ministry, Perak State Government and the Ipoh Municipality to fight the dengue menace in Manjoi, Perak's largest Malay populated settlement comprising five planned villages with over 31,000 residents.

How could the authorities allow the death toll in Manjoi to continue to climb when they should have known from last year's dengue data that it is a "black area" for dengue and a special operation should have been launched to make it dengue-free.

DAP is convening a roundtable conference of all political parties/professional groups/civic organizations/NGOs/mass media at the Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall, Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday, 22nd January 2003 at 11 a.m. on the dengue epidemic to prevent more avoidable deaths particularly among urban Malay children.

Invitations have been sent out to all political parties, ruling and opposition, and their youth and women wings; professional groups like the Malaysian Medical Association, the Bar Council; trade unions and consumer organisations like the MTUC, CUEPACS, NUTP, FOMCA, PCA, CAP, ERA, Aliran and the state-level consumer bodies; civic organizations, youth organizations and NGOs like ABIM, HAKAM, SUARAM, etc and the editors of all printed, electronic and Internet publications including Malaysiakini and Agendadaily.

Malaysians who are interested to attend the roundtable conference can contact the convenor of the roundtable conference on the dengue epidemic, Dr. Tan Seng Giaw, DAP National Vice Chairman and MP for Kepong or the conference secretariat: John Chung 016-3148370 or Anthony Loke 016-6686165, 03-79578127.
 

(17/1/2003)


* Lim Kit Siang, DAP National Chairman