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Bangladeshis shun virus testing after fake screening scandal

The number of people being tested for coronavirus in Bangladesh has fallen by almost half, officials said on Sunday (19), in the wake of a huge screening scandal.

The number of tests carried out daily has fallen from about 18,000 in late June to just over 10,000 in the past two weeks, the health department said.


The huge drop followed the arrest of more than a dozen people, including a Dhaka hospital owner, on charges they issued fake certificates to thousands of patients saying they were virus-free without testing them.

"The panic among the people (over the virus) has gone," health department spokeswoman Nasima Sultana told AFP about the lower testing figures.

She added that monsoon floods, the cost of tests at 200 Taka ($2.40) and fears of being quarantined were making people reluctant to get properly diagnosed.

The low death rate -- officially at 1.28 percent -- rather than concerns over the veracity of test results also meant people with virus-symptoms preferred to stay at home, she added.

But leading public health expert Muzaherul Huq said there was increasing public distrust of testing following the alleged fake screenings.

Two hospitals and a testing centre in Dhaka were also shut by authorities over the scandal.

"It naturally raises questions about the credibility of the (test) centres. It has strongly discouraged them to go for a check," Huq, the former head of the state-run Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research, told AFP.

Dhaka banker Muminur Rahman told AFP he did not trust the testing regime as his 42-year-old brother received a negative result in mid-June even though he was suffering from virus symptoms.

His brother died a week later, and his sister-in-law, aged 34, followed him in early July. Neither was formally diagnosed as having the virus.

Huq, a former World Health Organisation adviser, said authorities urgently needed to ramp up testing to determine the real spread of the virus in the impoverished nation.

The country of 168 million people has recorded more than 200,000 infections, but experts say the real figures are likely to be much higher.

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Mareyah Bhatti

I’m Mareyah, a sustainability strategist and passionate home cook, exploring the links between climate, culture and food. Drawing on my Pakistani heritage, I champion the value of traditional knowledge and everyday cooking as a powerful - yet often overlooked - tool for climate action. My work focuses on making sustainability accessible by celebrating the flavours, stories and practices that have been passed down through generations.

As someone who grew up surrounded by the flavours and stories of my Pakistani heritage, food has always been more than nourishment - it’s about connections, culture and memory. It’s one of the only things that unites us all. We cook it, eat it and talk about it every day, even if our ingredients and traditions differ. We live in a world where climate change is a looming threat, and we’re constantly seeing images of crises and mentions of highly technical or political answers. But, what if one of the solutions was closer to home?

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