IN a move intended to empower the citizens and give them
mandate to decide on their own development priorities, the government adopted
the decentralization policy.
One of the key values of decentralization is embedded in
the development planning process. The policy allows citizens to prioritize
their development ambitions as an initial stage and basis for execution of
social service delivery interventions reflecting what community desires.
This is in contrast with the past. Through the former
monopolistic planning process, it was a few government bureaucrats somewhere in
the corridors of power who were bestowed with the mandate to decide for the
majority. From their air conditioned office rooms mostly located in urban
areas, the government technocrats had the powers to draw up a list of social
service projects to be implemented in the remote rural areas where the majority
live.
As the consequence of this, most such up-bottom projects
failed to yield satisfactory impact in overcoming the immediate peoples’
development challenges. For failure to reflect people’s desires, such projects
were viewed as unimportant and hence the negative perception among respective
communities in sustaining them.
With the new policy in place, the role of central
government now remains funding community driven development initiatives.
Through respective local government authorities people contribute the locally
available materials and human resources.
People are obliged to identify opportunities and obstacles
to their development and take the reins of power in deciding, initiating and
implementing prioritized development projects. The major role of the government
is to provide funds and expertise.
But years on since inception, decentralization policy in
one of the villages of Bunda District, Mara region, is more said than done. The
illusive pledge by the central government to provide the funds is blamed for
derailed execution of a health facility construction project for well over four
solid years.
Local leaders in Kinyambwiga village have a feeling that
what was meant for enforcing inclusion, efficiency and effectiveness in
enforcing community driven project outcomes has increasingly become a sheer
political charade.
The village endorsed the construction of a health facility
as their priority number one since 2009 but funds for execution of the
envisaged project have not yet been disbursed. Due to exposure to harsh
weathers, even the local materials that were collected by the villagers to
supplement the government support were now rotting along the proposed
construction site.
Mr David Magesa, Kinyambwiga village acting executive
officer in Bunda, Mara region showing bricks which were abandoned along a
proposed construction site for a health facility as a result of illusive
support in government development subsidy.
Mr David Magesa, Kinyambwiga village acting executive
officer in Bunda, Mara region showing bricks which were abandoned along a
proposed construction site for a health facility as a result of illusive
support in government development subsidy.
David Magesa, Kinyambwiga village acting executive officer
pointing at bricks damaged from exposure to harsh weathers. The bricks were
among the local building materials collected by residents in support of
construction of a health facility.
Residents of Kinyambwiga, one of the remotest and densely
populated villages in Guta ward in Bunda District, proposed the construction of
a health facility. The motive behind was to relieve expectant mothers the
burden of walking nearly 14 kilometres in search of antenatal health care.
More than 16,000 people across the six villages in Guta
ward compete over access to inadequate health services provided at the only
government health facility in the area. The facility is already overwhelmed by
poor infrastructures, understaffing and lack of various medical consumables
including medicines.
Guta ward councilor Mr Mwita Manyerwa said the construction
of a health facility was always on top of all development priorities during the
past four consecutive years. He said residents of Kinyambwiga considered the
plight of women and children in accessing health services to be their immediate
development concern.
Highly motivated, the residents could not hesitate to
contribute whatever local resources they could afford with anticipation to see
mothers and children relieved of the poor health services burden. However, the
central government failure to disburse the project funds has now remained their
major bottleneck, almost forever.
Mr Manyerwa said it was anticipated that the construction
of a health facility would cost about TSH 40ml. Another sum of 35ml was
budgeted for construction of a residential structure for the facility’s
prospective health workers.
“For more than four years now the development aspirations
of the people in Kinyambwiga have remained sheer illusions. Women and children
continue to suffer the consequence of walking long distance and unsatisfactory
healthcare at the only available health unit at Guta” said the councilor.
The councilor said among those who contributed to the ghost
construction of a health facility in Kinyambwiga is the Cabinet Minister, also
area Member of Parliament Stephen Wasira. The councilor said Mr Wasira donated
about Tsh 2ml as part of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) and which was
spent for purchasing aggregates.
Kinyambwiga village acting executive officer in Bunda
District, Mara region David Magesa showing piles of local building materials
abandoned along the proposed site for construction of a health facility as
result of illusive support in government subsidy. The materials have been there
since 2009.
Kinyambwiga village acting executive officer in Bunda
District, Mara region David Magesa showing piles of local building materials
abandoned along the proposed site for construction of a health facility as
result of illusive support in government subsidy. The materials have been there
since 2009.
David Magesa, Kinyambwiga village acting executive officer
showing piles of local building materials which have been abandoned along the
proposed contruction site for a health facility. This is a result of illusive
government support to subsidize peoples initiatives. The materials have been
there since 2009.
Lucy Charles is a Senior Nurse in Charge at Guta
Dispensary. She said the only health facility in place has to suspend routine
services for other patients in order to attend expectant women and children
during designated antenatal clinic sessions. It was a result of staff shortage
amid huge population of clients demanding health services.
Lucy said normally women have to wait since early morning
hours to late evening before they have got to be attended by a few available
medical staff. This is far more contrary to existing healthcare policies which
stipulate that any expectant woman has to be attended within 30 minutes after
arrival to a health facility. The facility has 6 health workers and a watchman.
Kinyambwiga village executive officer Mr David Magesa
believes that efforts by Kinyambwiga residents to spare off this predicament
were frustrated by the government’s failure to heed to its pledges regarding the
disbursement of funds for execution of the envisaged project.
Mr Magesa said the people’s willingness to contribute local
resources is a clear manifestation that they wanted to have healthcare services
at the nearest destination possible. But also to spare themselves of huge costs
incurred when they had to send patients to Guta Dispensary and especially
expectant women with unexpected pregnancy complications.
One has to part with between 4000 or 5000 for transport
costs when an expectant woman relative develops complications necessitating
care by skilled medical staff at Guta Dispensary, about 14 kilometres away. He
said.
But Lucy says things were not all that smooth when
expectant women arrive at Guta Dispensary. The health facility has no
electricity. This is despite conventional power lines passing hardly 100 metres
from the facility premises. Instead, kerosene lamps serve as source of light
especially for night deliveries.
Lucy recalls an incident during which she asked a male
night watchman‘s to use his beam torch for producing some light as she assisted
an expectant woman to deliver. The nurse was primarily depending on the light
from the lamp which went off abruptly after running short of kerosene. The
option to ask the watchman to go and buy some kerosene from nearby kiosks was
quite unlikely since it was late midnight and all of them had already closed.
The presence of a watchman in a labour room was not only
ridiculous but also restricted as pertains to expanded quality of health care
standards regarding respect and dignity to expectant women during delivery.
According to standards that was unnecessary and humiliating procedure.
Bunda District Council Chairperson Mr Joseph Malimbe said
the stalled construction of Kinyambwiga health facility results from the
central government’s limited financial capacity to fund all proposed projects
in good time. He said this was also the same reason for a health facility in
Guta ward which had no electricity and yet the power line passes in the stone
throw from the facility premises.
Poor healthcare infrastructure including uneven
distribution of health facilities are among the causative factors for expectant
women delivering under care by traditional birth attendants and hence high
maternal mortality and morbidity.
Statistics indicate that only 37 percent of expectant women
in Mara region delivered in facilities between 2005 and 2010, slightly above 36
percent of Rukwa across Tanzania Mainland and 32 percent in Zanzibar
respectively.
The fourth Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target is to
reduce to maternal mortality to at least 133 deaths out of 100,000 births by
2015. But according to prevailing circumstances, Tanzania will not be able to
meet this target, having only managed to reduce maternal deaths from 578 to 454
over the past ten years. It is argued that if in ten years Tanzania has only
been able to cut down its maternal mortality rate by 124 deaths, it won’t be
able to cut down 321 deaths to meet the MDG target in less than two years
remaining.
However, with the Bunda District village case in mind, the
major question revolves around why insisting people to prioritize their
development ambitions if very least attention is given to their priorities?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Toa maoni yako lakini angalia kuchafua hali ya hewa na usimuumize mwenzako