The Absence of the State's Role in Confronting the Health Disaster
Dengue Fever and Malaria
With the widespread outbreak of dengue fever and malaria in Sudan, the features of an acute health crisis are unfolding, revealing the absence of an effective role for the Ministry of Health and the state's inability to confront an epidemic that claims lives day after day. Despite scientific and technological advances in pathology, the facts are revealed and corruption emerges.
Absence of a Clear Plan:
Despite the number of infections exceeding thousands, and mass deaths being recorded according to some media sources, the Ministry of Health has not announced a clear plan to combat the epidemic. The lack of coordination between health authorities and the absence of a proactive vision in dealing with epidemic crises are noticeable.
Collapse of Medical Supply Chains
Even the simplest medicines like "Panadol" have become scarce in some areas, reflecting a collapse in supply chains and the absence of oversight in the distribution of medicines, at a time when one needs the simplest tools of pain relief and support.
Absence of Community Awareness
There are no effective media campaigns to educate people about ways to prevent mosquitoes or recognize the symptoms of the disease, which increases the spread of infection and weakens the community's ability to protect itself.
Weak Health Infrastructure
Hospitals suffer from a severe shortage of medical personnel and equipment, even basic diagnostic tools, which makes the response to the epidemic slow and random, and endangers the lives of thousands.
How Have Other Countries Dealt with Epidemics?
Brazil:
- Launched ground and aerial spraying campaigns using modern pesticides.
- Distributed mosquito nets and activated community awareness campaigns.
- Provided medicines urgently in affected areas.
Bangladesh:
- Established temporary emergency centers in poor neighborhoods.
- Provided hotlines for reports and mobile response teams.
France:
- Activated early warning systems.
- Intensified monitoring of the transmitting mosquito and started local awareness campaigns.
Health is one of the most important duties and the state is fully responsible
Sudan still lacks effective detection and reporting mechanisms, making the real numbers much higher than announced, and increasing the complexity of the crisis. The current health crisis is a direct result of the absence of an active state role in health care that puts human life at the forefront of its priorities, a state that applies Islam and applies the saying of Omar Ibn Al-Khattab, may God be pleased with him, "If a mule stumbles in Iraq, God will ask me about it on the Day of Resurrection."
Proposed Solutions
- Establishing a health system that fears God first in human life and is effective, not subject to quotas or corruption.
- Providing free health care as a basic right for all the people. And canceling licenses for private hospitals and preventing investment in the field of medicine.
- Activating the role of prevention before treatment, through awareness campaigns and mosquito control.
- Restructuring the Ministry of Health to be responsible for people's lives, not just an administrative body.
- Adopting a political system that puts human life above economic and political interests.
- Disconnecting from criminal organizations and the drug mafia.
In the history of Muslims, hospitals were built to serve people for free, managed with high efficiency, and funded from the treasury, not from people's pockets. Health care was part of the state's responsibility, not a favor or a trade.
What is happening today in Sudan from the spread of epidemics, and the absence of the state from the scene, is a warning sign that cannot be ignored. What is required is not just providing Panadol, but establishing a real welfare state that cares about human life, and addresses the roots of the crisis, not its symptoms, a state that is aware of the value of man and his life and the purpose for which he was found, which is to worship God alone. The Islamic state is the only one capable of addressing health care issues through a health system that can only be implemented under the second righteous caliphate on the method of prophecy, which will be established soon, God willing.
﴿O you who have believed, respond to Allah and to the Messenger when he calls you to that which gives you life.﴾
Written for the Central Media Office Radio of Hizb ut-Tahrir
Hatem Al-Attar - Egypt Province