Wednesday 8 April 2020

Makerere University Catholic Philosophy Don Dr Jimspire Spire Ssentongo Protests unfair COVID-19 Quarantine: The day Dr.Spire Wrote a letter to God and promised to walk out of Hell in protest





 

COVID-19: Quarantined returnees declare hunger strike 

 https://observer.ug/news/headlines/64189-dr-spire-other-quarantineers-and-how-states-coerce-consent

Although many had completed their institutional quarantine towards the end of the week, the government said they will all have to stay for another 14 days after one of the quarantined persons tested positive for coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

Even those that tested negative on the last day of the quarantine have not been cleared to go home despite their claims of not having come in contact with the confirmed cases. Uganda's confirmed coronavirus cases remain at 48 after all 398 samples tested negative.

The Observer columnist and cartoonist also lecturer at Uganda Martyrs University, Dr Jimspire Spire Ssentongo says that although he tested negative for COVID-19 and has always been locked up in his room for the past 14 days, the government has decided to continue to hold him in quarantine for another 14 days.

Jimspire's protest notes placed on his door

Ssentongo who came back to Uganda on March 18 is bothered that several people who returned with him on the same flight were never quarantined, while others were given special consideration to be quarantined from within their homes, yet those who have endured the institutional quarantine are still being held for more days.

Ssentongo who is currently quarantined at Arch Apartments in Ntinda with 15 other people says all of them stayed in self-contained rooms where they had no contact with anyone. Today, he posted a protest note on social media saying that their only crime is the fact that someone in the same quarantine centre who has also been in his own room throughout tested positive.

Ssentongo has declared a protest, saying he needs no one to knock on his door except if they have news for when he is getting his quarantine certificate. He says he does not need food but only needs to get out of there.

"I have been in quarantine since then. Of course the first part was mismanaged and we were moved from Entebbe to here. It has been 15 days here in my room, and then they pass the new policy by which if any person is found positive here, then we begin afresh. If I have been here for 18 days and they test and find that one person is positive, they then start counting 14 more days meaning this will continue endlessly. They seem not to care about the implications of this. It is not based on science, it is not based on logic. It is based on a pure gamble because if I am in my room locked not interacting with people." said Ssentongo on telephone.

Reacheal Namutebi, who is also held up in Arch apartments says that their fear is that they will be held longer than expected, adding that although a positive case was discovered a week ago, the new policy on quarantine has been abruptly enforced without due consideration of their plight.
“I am stressed, I have a headache because of this and we are all worried. The problem is that some cases might come as a result of the bad quarantine system,” she says.

Another person quarantined at Entebbe Central Inn said she was starting a hunger strike in protest of her continued detention.  At the Entebbe based Central Inn, there are 45 people under quarantine.
"This is now day 17 in Covid quarantine. We were tested on the 14th…a directive was brought in a day before of institutional quarantine whilst we were in air travelling over here…we observed well the travel advisory…The tests were carried on the 14th we have health certificates," she said. 

The Uganda Virus Research Institute director Dr Pontiano Kaleebu says that scientifically if the people under quarantine did not mix and were locked up in their rooms, they should be cleared to go. He says that they had a meeting during the week where it was said that when someone tests positive in a hotel, the people there should have their stay extended. He, however, referred the matter to Dr Henry Kyobe, the COVID-19 incident commander.

Doctor asks God if our leaders are the best He could honestly find for Uganda

https://www.ugchristiannews.com/doctor-asks-god-if-our-leaders-are-the-best-he-could-honestly-find-for-uganda/



Silence, ordinary man praying 

 



Dear God, it’s me again. I hope you don’t get tired of the prayers from this corner of your vast empire.

Sometimes I get a disturbing feeling that you will lock us out one day. But I swear upon your mighty name, dear Lord, we shall break your door. Please forgive my questions, I do not mean to doubt your sense of justice.

Before you, I am only a child with an imperfect mind. What do I know? But if I may ask, what did we, from this side of the world, do to you?
We are told that leaders come from God. Yes, that they come from you. But dear Lord, when you looked around, are these the best you could find for us? I am not by any means trying to accuse you of anything. Besides, how could I! But, how come some parts of the world get better deals, yet some of them even long abandoned you!

Could our countries be your demonstration ground on how not to lead! Could this place be where you usually conduct experiments on bad governance? It is true we vote, but you know we hardly choose.

I will keep apologising, again forgive us if we blame you for our own faults. Sometimes we feel so helpless and abandoned, like white ants between teeth. Left with nowhere to turn to, to you we return with our load of burdens. Sometimes we go through those who tell us you sent them; they even charge us exorbitantly to bring our prayers to you.

You warned us that many false prophets shall come claiming to be sent by you, but we are too vulnerable to tell when they arrive in the middle of our miseries.

Our problems are their capital. Not to risk my prayer getting lost after my money has been picked from the envelope, today I chose to come directly to you. This is going to be a complicated prayer. A little back to our leaders. They have made it difficult for us to know what to pray for.
It is not until one of them dies in a road accident that road carnage becomes a serious problem. Then they come out to condemn pot- holes and bad driving in the strongest terms!
With their faces drenched in sorrow, they regret that if their own was not using the ordinary person’s means of transport, he wouldn’t have died in an accident.

As if the accident has served them with the long- awaited justification, like a cannibal at a funeral, they then use this to demand for money to buy themselves huge cars.

Dear God, in such circumstances, what should be our prayer if we want public transport to concern them? You know we are good-hearted people, only that we have been treated like cockroaches. Guide us not to be led into temptation to pray contrary to their wish to live.

Now they no longer talk about the cancer machine, long after the promised period. My Lord, they said they procured it in 2013. They then loaded it on a tortoise so that it gets here ‘soon’. Yes, as soon as we are dead!

The gate receiving the dead from Uganda must be very busy. Don’t you ask yourself why? The ushers on that gate need a ‘hand- shake’ from you, for it must be a tedious job.

Nevertheless, not until one of the leaders you gave us is accidentally hospitalised here and dies from these death traps they call hospitals, it might never become a serious matter. Oh again, lead us not into temptation to pray harmfully, but please deliver us from this evil!

Dear God, you are all-knowing, but you must have lost count of the money stolen from this country. Now let’s play a bit, my Lord. Just mention any kind of thievery and I will give you an example from my country. If I fail to come up with one in seconds, you are free to condemn me to die at a Ugandan public hospital.

But tell me something; when they die and come that side, how do you receive these thieves? How do they look in the eyes of the millions that lost their lives due to their bottomless greed? Do they run to hell before you even condemn them?

For the sinner that I am, I shouldn’t judge. Besides, we are told that all sins are equal before you. But if at all I am to end up in hell and I find myself in the same section with them, I will walk out in protest. You told us that ‘to whom more is given, more is expected’. You gave them more power than us, and I don’t have to remind you how they use it.

My Lord, these broken shoes I am wearing, I bought them brand new three weeks ago. Yes, from a licenced shop whose goods are cleared by government. Down here is every- one’s dumping ground. We are at your mercy all the time, never sure that anything we buy is genuine. They shop abroad, from those countries you gave caring leaders.

A few days back, our assistant inspector general of police was brutally assassinated. His bodyguard and driver were ordinary; I won’t mention them. We solemnly mourn him, even those of us who are still haunted by echoes of his voice commanding the suppression of some people’s legitimate claims. Many more people have died at the hands of assassins and robbers with no report.
Finally, now our caring president finds the urgent need of installing security cameras in all towns. Dear Lord, how should we pray?
Amen.


jsssentongo@gmail.com
The writer works with the school of Postgraduate Studies and Research at Uganda Martyrs University, Nkozi.