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Turkmenistan|health|November 9, 2021 / 02:14 PM
WHO casts doubt on Turkmenistan's zero-Covid claim - report
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AKIPRESS.COM - A senior World Health Organization official has cast doubt on Turkmenistan's claim that it has zero Covid cases, telling the BBC  it is unlikely the virus is not circulating in the country.

"[It] has been spreading worldwide as a pandemic for almost two years now," said Dr Catherine Smallwood, a WHO senior emergencies officer. "From the scientific point of view, it's unlikely that the virus is not circulating in Turkmenistan."

Turkmenistan is one of only a handful of countries, including North Korea, that claim to have no coronavirus cases. Dr Smallwood's comments represent the first public challenge by the WHO to Turkmenistan's claim, as a growing number of Covid cases are being reported in the country informally.

The WHO relies on data provided by national governments to inform its global coronavirus statistics. Until recently, the organisation repeated Turkmenistan's claim that no Covid-19 cases had been registered in the country - drawing criticism from independent observers and media.

Asked if the WHO was now suggesting Turkmenistan was providing false data, Dr Smallwood said the health body could not "call into question whether a country is acting in the spirit of the International Health Regulations" - referring to the legal framework that defines countries' rights and obligations in global public health crises.

Dr Smallwood said it was more important to "build a dialogue" with administrations like President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov's, rather than "make statements that may not in fact lead to the type of actions that we would want to see".

Analysts say that Turkmenistan's official statistics on coronavirus are unreliable. One reason was the "extremely repressive, autocratic nature of the government," said Rachel Denber, deputy director of the Europe and Central Asia division at Human Rights Watch.

The Turkmenistan government "has a long history of suppressing data and a long history of punishing people who expose the truth", she said.

A WHO team visited Turkmenistan in July 2020 - the only Covid-19 mission that has been allowed so far. There were some positive signs in the country, Dr Smallwood said - face masks and social distancing requirements had replaced a previous system of fines against those wearing masks, who were accused of "sewing panic". And earlier this year the country became the first to make vaccination mandatory for all adults.

Dr Smallwood told the BBC that the delegation to Turkmenistan "provided very concrete actions that the country could be taking, such as broader use of face masks", and she said the WHO had to take into account that in each country there was "a different context, a different political reality and a different technical capacity to respond".

"The WHO relies on the willing collaboration, communication, and trust with our member states," she said. "We have an open dialogue that we continue to build with our member states and we will continue to do so whatever the circumstances."

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