|
Sitembile Siwawa Zulu |
By Paul Shalala
In life, Sitembile Siwawa Zulu was just an ordinary
journalist.
But in death, she has united the nation to fight for a just
cause: reduce maternal death.
According to UNICEF, Zambia has one of the highest
mortality rates.
“In Zambia, 591 maternal deaths occur per 100,000 live
births while the infant, neonatal and under-five mortality rates are at 70, 34,
and 119 per 1,000 live births, respectively. These mortality rates are
unacceptably high. The major causes of child mortality are malaria, respiratory
infections, diarrhoea, malnutrition, and anaemia,” reads a statement on the UN agency's
Zambia page..
Three days ago, Zambia Daily Mail Sub-Editor Sitembile
delivered what people call a ‘bouncing baby girl’ at the Levy Mwanawasa General
Hospital in Lusaka.
A day later when everyone was sending her congratulatory
messages, Sitembile breathed her last and that’s how Zambia lost one of its
hard working journalists.
She became the latest victim of women who die while giving
birth.
Sadly, her death came a few days before the first anniversary
of her marriage to Mr Victor Zulu.
Her death has sparked outrage on social media.
Zambians from all walks of life are shocked at the untimely
death of the 29 year old scribe who was recently promoted to the position of
Sub-Editor after working as a reporter for a long time.
At the moment, the most trending hashtag in Zambia is #NoWomanShouldDieWhileGivingLife
which is a spontaneous social media campaign to highlight the plight of women
in labour.
On Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, Zambians have been
discussing the challenges women face while deivering.
|
Zambians on Facebook writing about Sitembile's death |
For Sitembile, I remember her for having dedicated a good
part of her career covering issues of gender, children and agriculture.
She ran a blog called Gender@Heart where she wrote many
stories over the years.
The profile on her blog reads: “Apart from being a writer,
blogger and everything else, Sitembile has strong passion for fashion and beauty
particularly black beauty! Having endured so much ridicule for being dark, she
is a strong advocator of black big beauty! Everything about fashion and beauty
to her centres around dark African women. She believes in the world of women
although she is not a feminist.”
On the blog, as well as in the Zambia Daily Mail newspaper, Sitembile wrote
many award winning pieces on children and gave a human face to the challenges
children face and the strides they make in life.
“I hear that my former ZAMCOM student Sitembile Siwawa has
passed on. She had finally become a colleague at Daily Mail and a Save the
Children reliable reporter. My last lesson to her was 'Stembile, you seem to
have an interest in children issues. Make it your niche'. She never relented
and became a goodwill ambassador for children through her work. Dying in child
birth after delivering a bouncy baby. RIP,” wrote Chishaba Masengu, a former
lecturer and now a Media and Communications Coordinator at Save The Children Zambia.
|
Sitembile (middle) and her close friend Doreen Nawa (far left) during the 2014 CAADP Media Awards |
Even for women, Sitembile did the same but unfortunately,
she ended up facing one of the challenges they grapple with: maternal mortaity.
In her career, Sitembile was a member of the African Union's Comprehensive
Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Journalist Network which
promotes the reporting of agricultural issues on the continent.
In 2014, she was awarded the CAADP Journalist of the Year
Award in Durban, South Africa.
The story which made her win this prestigious pan-African
media award was titled “Female Farmers Empowerment Vital.”
Just the title of the story tells you how passionate the
lady was to gender issues and agriculture.
At a personal level, I had a few encounters with Sitembile
when I used to work in Lusaka.
Most times we would meet on assignments and she was this shy
lady who rarely spoke in public.
I remember one time asking her if she knew the Siwawa family
of Mumbwa who reside in a village called Natani which is close to my own
village Lubanze in Nangoma area.
She told me she was related to them and that their clan
originally hails from Zimbabwe.
|
Mr and Mrs Zulu on their wedding in September 2016 |
Apart from journalists just praising her in death or sharing
the hashtag #NoWomanShouldDieWhileGivingLife, others have gone a step further
to question why issues of women and maternal mortality rarely make it to the
front page of tabloids or evening bulletins of major TV stations.
“But I want every Zambian journalist reading this to pause
for a minute and reflect on how it came to pass that we failed Sitembile and
thousands of women like her by not making health a story worth telling, even
though health is a matter of life and death for 14 million people who live in
this country. And she passed on in a big city, the capital where there is even
some modicum of care and infrastructure. Think about women tucked in the nooks
and crannies of Zambia who risk death every time they have to give life to a
child,” wrote Edem Djokotoe, a Ghanaian-born journalist and media trainer who
has vast experience in media issues in Zambia.
Edem further says: “I am angry at all of us because we have
chosen to subvert the values of news which form the bedrock of our professional
and throw Public Interest out of the window. We have gone to bed with
politicians and made them the only story in town. We don’t cover health unless
the Health Minister is making a speech about health.”
Meanwhile, the Zambian government has launched an inquiry
into the circumstances leading to Sitembile’s death.
A statement issued by the Minister of Health Dr. Chitalu
Chilufya says authorities will soon get to the bottom of the matter.
And a senior Ministry of Health official has explained what
is known so far.
|
Sitembile with Brenda Zulu in Johannesburg, South Africa during a CAADP meeting |
“Sitembile Zulu, 29 years old, in her 2nd pregnancy underwent
a caesarian section due to fetal distress on the 8th September 2017. Fetal
distress is when the fetus does not receive adequate amounts of oxygen during
pregnancy or labour. It is oftentimes detected through an abnormal fetal heart
rate. The deceased became breathless after taking a bath yesterday in the morning,
after which the condition rapidly deteriorated before she passed on despite
efforts to resuscitate her,” said Dr Maximilian Bweupe, the spokesperson of the
Ministry of Health.
Tributes have also come from Zambia’s official Government Spokesperson Kampamba Mulenga (Minister of Information) who has described Sitembile’s demise as a loss to the nation.
For some of her close friends, her death is a shocker.
Doreen Nawa, a reporter at the Zambia Daily Mail has shared
her thoughts over the death of a colleague who I used to fondly call her ‘twin
sister.’
She tweeted: “Am lost without you Sitembile…… Your death was
preventable.”
Doreen and Sitembile travelled across the globe together and
shared many platforms abroad where they jointly received media awards.
Another close friend Brenda Zulu, a blogger, said: “Remembering
you through our travels around Africa as we covered Agriculture. We took these
pictures for Doreen Chilumbu Nawa as she did not come along with us in Jo'burg
for the conference. Will miss you! #RIP Sitembile Zulu.”
Sitembile’s death is not just a local story.
The impact of her death after delivering a child has made it
on international media with the London-based BBC publishing an account of her
death while some Nigerian sites have carried it too.
For Sitembile, her life has come to a tragic end but for her
husband of 11 months, this is the time when Zambians need to show him love and
care.
For us in the media, we will continue emulating Sitembile
for the causes she stood for: Gender, Children and Agriculture.
Hamba Kahle Sisiwethu!!!!!