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African leaders launch new malaria alliance30 Sep 2009 Paul Chinnock Source: TropIKA.net
The leaders of 20 African nations, meeting in New York during the UN General Assembly, have launched ALMA Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said, “By establishing ALMA today, we are now creating a critical forum and mechanism for advocacy, action, and follow-up on the implementation of these noble goals.” The goals were ambitious but achievable. He reminded those present at the launch that, with an estimated 500 million annual cases, Africa is the continent most affected by malaria, accounting for 86% of all cases and 91% of all malaria deaths worldwide. The disease is responsible for a quarter of all deaths of African children under five years. Convened by President Kikwete, ALMA is the first Head of State-level assembly expressly dedicated to ending deaths from the disease. The intention is to provide a high level forum to ensure efficient procurement, distribution, and utilization of malaria control interventions; the sharing of most effective malaria control practices; and ensure that malaria remains high on the global policy agenda. Richard Sezeibera, health minister of Rwanda which will participate in ALMA, told the BBC Welcomed Reaction to the launch of ALMA has so far been enthusiastic. WHO Director General Margaret Chan described it as a critical step in the fight against malaria.The UN Special Envoy for Malaria, Ray Chambers, told VOA Also speaking to VOA He added that the international community must also meet its commitment to support Africa towards its attainment of the malaria MDGs: That would require full funding for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. He said the Fund was now in “a massive funding crisis” and was facing a $5 billion shortfall in 2010. Comments |
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