Cooped up in an isolation ward, a young Zimbabwean man who had been diagnosed with Covid-19, pleaded with his family for help.
Thirty-year-old Zororo Makamba was “alone and scared”, according to his older brother who spoke to Zimbabwe’s privately owned Daily News newspaper.
Makamba was being treated in the Wilkins Hospital, designated as the main isolation facility for coronavirus patients in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare.
Shortly after he talked to his family, he was dead.
The death of Makamba, a well-known journalist, came swiftly – less than three days after his diagnosis.
Famous for his online social and political commentary, under the banner “State of the Nation”, his death achieved an unwanted milestone.
He was the country’s first coronavirus casualty and it shocked Zimbabwe.
The fact that Makamba came from a wealthy, high-profile family did not save him, and family members have argued that his death has exposed the inadequacies of the country’s medical response to the threat of conronavirus.
‘Death could have been avoided’
“The government is ill prepared to deal with the virus,” older brother Tawanda Makamba told the Daily News.
The health ministry said his pre-existing condition made him vulnerable to the disease. He had undergone surgery last November to remove a tumour from under his lung and was in recovery.
While his family admit that his immune system was compromised, they insist that his death could have been avoided.
Very few governments were prepared for a public health crisis of this magnitude.
As the coronavirus swept through Asia, Europe and the US, Zimbabwe has watched from the sidelines as advanced economies with better developed health care systems have buckled under the strain.
The shortage of hospital beds, of protective clothing and life-saving equipment, such as ventilators, is a global problem.
‘World needs to know what happened’
The difference is that many of these countries were overwhelmed by hundreds and then thousands of patients. Zimbabwe, it seems, was overwhelmed by one.
“The world needs to know what happened to Zororo,” his brother Tawanda told the BBC in a brief phone conversation.
Zororo Makamba had returned from New York with flu-like symptoms and was told by his doctor that it was a regular flu, the family says.
But on Friday 20 March his condition deteriorated and he was tested for coronavirus. The positive result did not come through until the early hours of Saturday morning, but his admission to the isolation facility was delayed because “they were not ready to admit him”, according to his family.