Stakeholders endorse collective innovative approach for eradication of malaria in Nigeria

Abuja, 27 April, 2022 – To commemorate the 2022 World Malaria Day (WMD), World Health Organization (WHO) and stakeholders have endorsed a collective, innovative and transformative approach towards tackling the malaria scourge in the Nigeria.

This call came at the Ministerial Press conference organized by the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) in collaboration with WHO and malaria control partners to mark WMD in Abuja on 26 April 2022.

Every year on 25 April, the World celebrates WMD.

Speaking at this year’s event, Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, said that the theme for 2022 WMD – Advance Equity, Build Resilience, End Malaria with the national slogan “Every effort counts”, reinforces the need for increased investment in malaria prevention and treatment services towards achieving a malaria-free country.

He commended the gratifying effort of partners who have been collaborating with the government in adopting various innovative tools toward achieving a malaria-free Nigeria.

“For a malaria-free Nigeria, let each of us play our parts, because every effort counts,” he said.

Over the years, the government of Nigeria and its partners have continued to develop and initiate new and innovative strategies for prevention, diagnosis and treatment to ensure a substantial reduction in the number of cases and deaths recorded each year due to long-standing disease in the country.

As a strategic partner of the FMoH, WHO provides technical support to the National Malaria Elimination Programme (NMEP) to identify, assess, design, implement and monitor malaria in Nigeria.

In his goodwill message to the WHO Country Representatives, Dr Walter Kazadi Mulombo said the theme aligns with WHO’s call to urgently scale up innovation and the deployment of new tools in the fight against malaria, while advocating for equitable access to malaria prevention and treatment, within the context of building health system resilience.

He acknowledged that recently, there has been a growing political commitment at country, regional and international levels to tackle malaria which has seen significant breakthroughs in malaria prevention and control, despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

I believe that collaboratively, we can “Advance Equity, Build Resilience, End Malaria” and let us remember, “Every effort counts, he said.

According to Dr Mulombo, “WHO remains committed to continued partnership with FMoH/NMEP and all other Roll Back Malaria (RBM) partners through the provision of technical support and guidance to implement the activities necessary to meet the National goals.”

In their separate goodwill messages, partners which included, the Dangote Foundation (representing the Private Sector), USAID/PMI, and Catholic Relief Services – CRS (representing implementing partners), unanimously called for a collective innovative and transformative approach to the eradication of malaria. They also canvassed for additional investment and funding to continue supporting response to ensure that the malaria campaigns are implemented on time.

Highlights of the event was a commemoration walk in Abuja and various states across the country, free malaria testing, and an exhibition of innovative tools and drug used in combating the disease.

The World Malaria Report of 2021 estimated that 228 million malaria cases and over 600,000 malaria deaths occurred in 2020 within the WHO African Region, and this accounted for 95% of cases and deaths globally.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

Democratic Republic of the Congo kicks off Ebola vaccination

Brazzaville/Kinshasa — The Democratic Republic of the Congo today kicked off Ebola vaccination in Mbandaka, the capital city of Equateur Province in the north-west, to halt the spread of the virus following an outbreak which has claimed two lives since 21 April.

Around 200 doses of the rVSV-ZEBOV Ebola vaccine have been shipped to Mbandaka from the eastern city of Goma. More doses will be delivered progressively in the coming days. The vaccination uses the “ring strategy” where the contacts and the contacts of contacts of confirmed Ebola patient are given the vaccine as well as frontline and health workers.

So far, 233 contacts have been identified and are being monitored. Three vaccination teams are already on the ground and will work to reach all the people at high risk. To date, two cases, both deceased, have been confirmed since the outbreak began. The disease has currently been reported only in Mbandaka health district.

“With effective vaccines at hand and the experience of the Democratic Republic of the Congo health workers in Ebola response, we can quickly change the course of this outbreak for the better,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for Africa. “We are supporting the country in all the key aspects of Ebola emergency response to protect and save lives.”

The national health authorities are stepping up response in addition to the vaccination. A 20-bed Ebola treatment centre has been set up in Mbandaka. Disease surveillance and investigation of suspected cases are underway to detect any new infections, with WHO providing material support as well as six epidemiologists to assist in the response.

The country’s National Institute for Biomedical Research has completed an analysis of a sample from the first confirmed case, results of which show that the new outbreak indicates a new spill-over event from the host or animal reservoir. Investigations are ongoing to determine the source of the new outbreak and how it came to infect the first confirmed case.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has experienced 14 Ebola outbreaks since 1976, six of which have occurred since 2018 alone. Over the years, with the support of WHO and other partners and donors, the country has developed homegrown expertise capable of mounting effective Ebola response.

Investments in local expertise is paying off. Outbreak surveillance, detection and response have improved significantly.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

Chinese Lending to Africa Falls During First Year of Pandemic

Chinese loans to African governments plunged by more than three-quarters in the first year of the pandemic compared to the year before, researchers have found, with new loan commitments in 2020 at their lowest level in 16 years.

That could be due to Chinese lenders taking more precautions at the outset of the pandemic and focusing on domestic priorities, as well as African countries being less willing to borrow, the study by Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center found.

Chinese lending in 2020 fell to $1.9 billion, the study released this week showed, with only 11 new loan commitments recorded. That’s compared to the 32 loans signed in 2019 worth some $8.2 billion.

“As the pandemic continues to wreak havoc on livelihoods within China and the debt position of some African countries, shifts in financing types and sources are expected for future Chinese financing to Africa,” the report said.

China is sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest single creditor and, in the two decades since 2000, has signed 1,188 loans worth $160 billion with 49 African governments, state-owned enterprises and regional organizations.

Despite the downturn, Oyintarelado Moses, one of the study’s authors, told VOA that Chinese loans to Africa would likely pick up in the post-pandemic period “as other sources of financing beyond lending from traditional borrowers increase.”

The biggest borrowers have been Angola, Ethiopia and Zambia. The latter became the first pandemic-era default in 2020, with debt of almost $32 billion. According to the Reuters news agency, $5.78 billion of that debt was held by China and Chinese entities. China committed last week to joining Zambia’s creditor committee, a move welcomed by the International Monetary Fund.

China has long been accused of “debt-trap diplomacy” in which its massive loans to developing countries are said to leave them dependent on their creditor for support. Beijing strongly refutes these accusations, saying the West simply resents China’s close ties with Africa because of its Belt and Road Initiative — which is China leader Xi Jinping’s global infrastructure development plan.

A January op-ed in China’s state media, the Global Times, criticized reports in Western media that Beijing was slowing lending to countries on the continent, saying, “Whether China accelerates or slows its lending to Africa, the West is ready to criticize China with their well-worn ‘debt trap’ story.

“In fact,” the op-ed continued, “not one developing country has fallen into the so-called debt trap due to Chinese loans.”

On his visit to several African states last year, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said countries should not be left with a “tremendous debt that they cannot repay.”

Source: Voice Of America

Angolan Actor Sílvio Nascimento wins New York award

Luanda – Angolan actor Sílvio Nascimento is in the main cast that has just won the “Silver” award in the Streaming Drama category, at the TV and Film Award Festival, in New York (USA).

According to a press release that ANGOP had access today, Wednesday, the awarded drama, which portrays the story of a night club in Lisbon, was among the titles that most conquered the jury of the event.

The award gathered the best world productions in the television and cinema industry.

The group of judges included over 200 producers, directors, screenwriters and other creative media professionals from all over the world.

Sílvio Emerson de Sousa Ferreira do Nascimento is an actor born in Lubango, Huila province. In 2018 he was the winner of the Angola Golden Globe for Best actor.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

In Shanghai, Leaving Home for Testing Means COVID Exposure

“Going down to get tested is really the only time when you encounter other people,” said Jackson Nemeth, who lives in one of Shanghai’s locked down neighborhoods.

When Nemeth, a 27-year-old American from Cleveland, Ohio, arrived in Shanghai last September to start a job in China’s financial center, he never expected that the bustling city would become a ghost town almost overnight.

“Locked down since April 1. They told us originally that it will be a four-day lockdown. So, people got four days’ worth of supplies, and since then until now, it’s been exactly three weeks today,” Nemeth told VOA Mandarin in a phone interview Thursday. “Pretty much every day they’re finding positive (cases), which is just frustrating.”

According to Nemeth, people don’t know when the lockdown will end.

Nemeth, who has a master’s degree in Chinese and a job connected to trade policy, lives in Shanghai’s Jing’an district. Because authorities have been finding new COVID-19 cases each day, the neighborhood is now under complete lockdown.

On April 11, Shanghai sectors were categorized into three types of zones — lockdown zones, controlled zones and precautionary zones — based on their total positive cases, according to the state-controlled China Daily.

Some 11.88 million people live in lockdown zones, where residents must remain at home except in special circumstances such as a life-threatening illness.

Shanghai, with more than 25 million residents, is China’s most populous city.

For Nemeth, getting a nucleic acid COVID-19 test is his only opportunity to leave home. A nucleic acid test is a diagnostic test for the virus that causes COVID-19.

‘Blunt authoritarian tools’

Dr. Amesh Adalja, a physician with Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security who focuses on emerging infectious disease, said that any social interaction is an opportunity for the virus to spread, and the omicron variant is highly contagious.

“There are likely a lot of unknown chains of transmission circulating throughout (Shanghai), and the draconian methods the Chinese government has forced on its population provides no incentive for cases to come forward, especially mild ones,” Adalja told VOA Mandarin via email last week.

Adalja said Chinese authorities should be teaching the population harm reduction and risk tolerance, adding that they need to move away from “blunt authoritarian tools” that are not supported by science.

“The exit strategy is to vaccinate their high-risk population with mRNA vaccines, deploy home tests, antivirals, and monoclonal antibodies,” Adalja said. The mRNA vaccines — which include the Pfizer and Moderna versions — teach a person’s cells how to make a protein that will trigger an immune response inside their body, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and have proven to be effective against COVID-19.

Xinhua News Agency quoted Gao Chunfang, director of the Testing and Experiment Center of Yueyang Hospital, which is affiliated with the Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, as saying that high-frequency nucleic acid testing is “very necessary” because all pathogens have an incubation period, and if the viral load is relatively low, the initial test may fail.

China’s zero-COVID policy, a countrywide COVID-19 control measure, has been in place since 2020. It has led to lockdowns in cities throughout the nation, but most notoriously in Shanghai. On March 28, China’s financial hub imposed its first temporary lockdown, which blossomed into a widespread lockdown of indefinite length.

And even as factory and logistical shutdowns threaten China’s economic growth, Chinese President Xi Jinping has repeatedly ruled out moving away from the zero-COVID policy.

According to the daily statistics released by the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, on Tuesday, there were 1,606 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 11,956 asymptomatic infections. Among the confirmed cases, 1,253 were previously reported as asymptomatic infections. The city’s official death tally stands at 238 as of Tuesday, putting the fatality rate at 0.045%.

Huang Yanzhong, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, points out those numbers may not give a complete picture of the outbreak’s toll.

Worldwide, the fatality rate of omicron for unvaccinated people over 80 years old is 20%, he said.

“If you do the math, the death toll could be as high as 120,000,” Huang told VOA Mandarin.

According to Huang, because a large portion of the Chinese population has not been exposed to this virus, relaxing restrictions would lead to an immediate surge in cases and deaths. He stressed that to get out of this vicious cycle, China must protect the vulnerable population and build resilience to the virus.

In the meantime, Shanghai undertakes daily polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and antigen testing of millions and accelerates transfers of people who test positive for COVID-19 to large quarantine centers.

“I do think there is a real risk that the mass public testing is actually spreading COVID rather than controlling it,” said Lawrence Gostin in an email. Gostin is a professor of global health law at Georgetown University and the director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center for National and Global Health Law.

“Antigen tests can also be done rapidly at home and is an important public health tool,” Gostin said. “PCR tests require laboratories, and it poses a risk if people gather together for PCR tests.”

Doubting comments online

“Nucleic acid testing is carried out every day in the lockdown and controlled zones. However, the risk of cross-infection caused by this channel is very high, but this loophole has not been well prevented,” said a netizen commenting on Weibo, a Twitter-like platform.

“We are taking PCR tests daily. What’s the scientific basis here? Are we just doing testing for fun?” asked another netizen.

On April 6, Zhong Nanshan, a Chinese respiratory disease expert who was in charge of controlling a 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and assisted in formulating the zero-COVID policy in early 2020, published a signed article in the journal National Science Review arguing that a long-term zero-COVID policy could not be achieved, and that China needed to reopen for normal socioeconomic development.

Zhong said in the English-language article that because omicron is so contagious, long-term dynamic clearing, or maintaining a long-term zero-COVID policy, is impossible. The article suggests China should take control measures that include increasing the vaccination rate, prioritizing the use of antigen kits in the community, speeding up drug research and development, and conducting follow-up investigations on cases to adjust the minimum quarantine time.

The Chinese translation of the article began circulating on the Chinese internet on April 19.

On the same day, the Chinese government website posted an article saying its general policy of dynamic clearing remains unchanged. The article quoted China’s Xi as saying that the zero-COVID policy protects people’s lives and health to the greatest extent possible.

Nemeth said that since the lockdown, people in his community have been taken away to quarantine centers almost every day.

“I see people being taken away a lot,” he said. “My desk is right in front of the window, and every day I see buses coming and taking away people with suitcases.”

Source: Voice of America

Angola: Over USD 100 bln taken from treasury

Luanda – More than 100 billion dollars have been withdrawn from the Treasury and transferred abroad, the Attorney General Hélder Pitta Gróz announced on Wednesday in Luanda.

According to the magistrate, who was speaking at the opening of the International Conference on Asset Recovery, without referring to the period in question, the sectors of the economy most affected were civil construction, public works, oil and diamonds.

He pointed out that in the last four years there has been legislative production by the holder of the executive power and the legislative power, which has updated both the criminal procedures, the typification of the facts and the respective criminal frameworks .

This fact contributed to the recovery of financial and non-financial assets, estimated at more than five billion US dollars, he said.

As non-financial assets, he added, stress went to factories, media, supermarkets, buildings, hotels and equity interests.

Pitta Gróz reported that since 2017, movable property, consisting of public funds amounting to approximately US$12 billion, has been seized in some cases and in foreclosures.

Of this amount, at least $6 billion was raised in Angola and the rest abroad, including in Portugal, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Monaco.

The international conference, which is due to end this afternoon, takes place under the theme “For societies committed to the fight against economic and financial crime”.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

‘Pandemic Phase’ Over for US, but COVID-19 Still Here, Fauci Says

Dr. Anthony Fauci has given an upbeat assessment of the current state of the coronavirus in the United States, saying the country is “out of the pandemic phase” with regard to new infections, hospitalizations and deaths, and that it appears to be making a transition to COVID-19 becoming an endemic disease — occurring regularly in certain areas.

Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert, said on the PBS NewsHour on Tuesday that the coronavirus remains a pandemic for much of the world. The threat is not over for the United States, he said, adding that he was speaking about the worst phase of the pandemic.

“Namely, we don’t have 900,000 new infections a day and tens and tens and tens of thousands of hospitalizations and thousands of deaths. We are at a low level right now,” he said.

In comments Wednesday to The Washington Post, however, Fauci seemed to clarify his earlier remarks, saying that unlike the “full-blown, explosive pandemic phase” during the brutal winter omicron surge, he was describing what appears to be a period of transition toward COVID-19 becoming an endemic disease.

“The world is still in a pandemic. There’s no doubt about that. Don’t anybody get any misinterpretation of that. We are still experiencing a pandemic,” Fauci told the Post.

His comments came as health authorities wrestle with how to keep COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations manageable and learn to live with what’s still a mutating and unpredictable virus.

The Biden administration has stressed that the nation has more tools — vaccinations, booster shots and medications — to better handle infections than earlier in the pandemic.

U.S. cases are far lower than they were in recent months. But health officials are keeping a close eye as highly contagious variants continue to spread. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says cases have risen about 25% in the past week.

As of Wednesday afternoon, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, the U.S. has recorded more than 81 million cases and more than 992,000 deaths.

Source: Voice of America

Girabola2021/22: Petro thrash Maquis and consolidate leading

Luanda – Petro de Luanda consolidated today, in the capital of the country, the leading of the first division of the National Football Championship (Girabola2021/22), after beating Bravos do Maquis, 3-0, in the 22nd round match played at 11 de Novembro Stadium.

With goals by Pedro Pinto (5 minutes), Erico Castro (47′) and Maia (54′), the team (1st/61 points) of the coach Alexandre Santos, distances from their most direct pursuers, the Sagrada Esperança, which is in second place with 56.

Bravos do Maquis from Moxico province, despite the negative score at home, remain in fifth place with 43 points.

The match was not held on the scheduled date due to the quarter-final matches of the continental league, in which Petro eliminated Mamelodi Sundows of South Africa, returning to the domestic competition in the aftermath of the qualification, 21 years later.

Also today, there was a late match of the 24 round between Desportivo da Lunda Sul (13th/29th) and Recreativo do Libolo (7th/36th), with a goalless draw at the Mangueiras field in Saurimo.

The round (22nd) has already recorded the following results:

Sagrada Esperança – Sporting de Cabinda (6-0), Interclube – Desportivo da Huíla (1-2), Cuando Cubango FC- Kabuscorp do Palanca (0-0), Sporting de Benguela-Williete de Benguela (0-4)), Recreativo da Caála-Desportivo da Lunda Sul (0-0), Académica do Lobito-Progresso Sambizanga (5-0) and 1º de Agosto-Recreativo do Libolo (0-1).

Source: Angola Press News Agency