Annual awards – bestowed at the AU – highlight
how Africa’s future
is inextricably tied to progress in defeating malaria
is inextricably tied to progress in defeating malaria
Yesterday, during the official opening of the African Union Summit of heads of state, H.E.
Armando Guebuza, President of Mozambique, conferred the 2014 African Leaders
Malaria Alliance (ALMA) Awards for Excellence in Vector Control to Cape Verde, Madagascar,
Malawi, Namibia, Rwanda,
São Tomé and Príncipe, and Swaziland.
Each country has demonstrated exemplary leadership in maintaining at least 95%
coverage year round of Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLIN) and/or Indoor
Residual Spraying (IRS) interventions, the most important tools in preventing
malaria.
Malaria
is a leading cause of child deaths and kills 627,000 people every year, most in
Africa. The continent has made tremendous
progress in the delivery and use of life-saving tools in the fight against
malaria, including LLINs, IRS, rapid diagnostic tests, and effective
treatments, including preventative care during pregnancy.
Yet
malaria continues to wreak a huge toll on Africa.
It burdens already fragile health systems; it is a leading cause of absenteeism
in schools; it negatively impacts agricultural productivity and businesses
large and small when employees and entrepreneurs are kept from their work; and
it robs African countries of at least USD $12 billion every year in economic
potential.
“We
cannot lose ground in our struggle to end preventable deaths and suffering from
malaria” said President Guebuza, who serves as Chair of ALMA. “Our people
and our communities are counting on us to continue to scale proven
interventions to insure that no African loses their livelihood or life to this
ancient disease.”
Last
month, the World Malaria Report declared that as a result of significant
scaling-up of malaria control interventions, an estimated 3.1 million lives
have been saved in Africa since 2000, reducing
malaria mortality rates by 49%. And while funding challenges remain, resources
for malaria prevention globally have grown from $100 million in 2000 to an
estimated $1.9 billion in 2013. ALMA’s
current Chair, H. E. President Guebuza of Mozambique, has rallied his peers
and partners to increase malaria funding so that we sustain these impressive
gains.
ALMA was founded by
H.E. President Jakaya Kikwete of the United Republic of Tanzania to create a
platform for Africa’s presidents and prime
ministers to accelerate action on malaria prevention and control. ALMA’s second chair, H.E. President Ellen Sirleaf of Liberia,
continued to promote performance and accountability through the innovative ALMA
Scorecard for Accountability and Action. Winners of ALMA’s Awards for Excellence are selected by
an independent committee representing the World Health Organization (WHO), Roll
Back Malaria (RBM), the private sector, civil society and academia. For
more information about ALMA
and for a profile of the progress shown by the seven winning countries, please
visit www.alma2015.org.
Contact:
Saleemah
Abdul-Ghafur
+251 939 643
193
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