Residents of Kubwa, FCT-Abuja, have alleged that they were being
charged N500 by vaccinators per person before receiving the Cerebro
Spinal Meningitis (CSM) vaccine.
Some residents told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday
that they could not understand the rationale behind the fee when the
Federal Government had announced that the immunisation was free.
NAN reports that the vaccination was being conducted by a woman
suspected to be working for an NGO at the Government Secondary School,
Kubwa, in Bwari Area Council of the FCT.
Mr Tony Isibon, a resident who was at the venue, told NAN that
because of the fear of the meningitis outbreak, his family had no choice
than to pay and receive the vaccine.
Cue-in audio (Isibon)
“The vaccination here is N500 per person. I do not know if it is
from government or a private organisation, but they collect N500 per
person. We just met people paying N500 and we joined.
“Since this is the only centre in Kubwa, and the threat of meningitis is real, people are paying the N500.
“There is only one official here; she is the person giving the injection and also the person collecting the money.’’
“Sure they receive N500 from each child and adult; each pay N500 to
get the vaccine,’’ Mrs Margaret Gonga, a housewife, also told NAN.
“I brought six children and I had to pay N3,000; we do not mind
paying the money as long as we get vaccinated, that is what is important
to us,’’ another resident, who simply identified herself as Mrs Benson,
told NAN.
“The meningitis and the heat is so much that we do not have any option other than to pay and be vaccinated,’’ she said.
Another resident, Mr Humphrey Anaeme said: “They say that this is an
NGO. If it is true; let them put their banner so that people will know
they are registered to carry out this exercise.’’
Anaemem said it was unfair of anyone to use a calamity to make money
from people when the government had made it free for citizens.
“The question that everyone is asking is: `what is the name of the
organisation? Where is their banner? How can we know they are legitimate
when they are charging N500 and government says it is free?’’
He expressed fear that vaccinators might be taking advantage of the
situation to administer fake drugs that could endanger people’s lives.
The woman administering the vaccine, who declined to give her name,
told NAN that she was working for the Maladitrace Foundation, an NGO.
“Actually this is Maladitrace Foundation, it is an NGO. Since there
is an outbreak in the FCT, our NGO saw the need to curtail the outbreak
by making these vaccines available at a cheaper rate to these people.
“The one the government actually brought has finished; they started two weeks ago and they have ended the exercise,’’ she said.
Reacting to the development, Dr Rilwanu Mohammed, the Executive
Secretary of the FCT Primary Health Care Board, told NAN that the agency
was not aware of individuals or organisations collecting money for CSM
vaccination in the territory.
Mohammed said that the agency had since exhausted its stock of CSM vaccines
made available to it by donor agencies for the exercise.
However, the scribe did not say if the agency would investigate the
report to ascertain the vaccine and its source as well as the rationale
behind the charge.
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