Tag: WHO

  • COVID-19 cases rise to 28,000 in Africa – WHO

    COVID-19 cases rise to 28,000 in Africa – WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, says the number of COVID-19 cases in the WHO African Region has increased to 28,000.

    The UN’s health agency gave the update on its official twitter account @WHOAFRO on Saturday.

    “Over 28,000 COVID-19 cases reported on the African continent – with over 8,000 associated recoveries and 1,300 deaths recorded,’’ it said.

    The WHO African Region COVID-19 dashboard showed that in sub-Saharan Africa, South Africa suffered the most severe outbreak, while Cameroon and Ghana had more than 2, 500 confirmed cases.

    The figures on the dashboard showed that South Africa, Algeria and Cameroon had continued to top the list of countries with the highest reported cases.

    It showed that South Africa had 4, 220 cases and 79 deaths followed by Algeria with 3, 127 cases and 415 deaths, while Cameroon had 1,403 confirmed cases with 49 deaths.

    According to the dashboard, South Sudan, Sao Tome and Principe, Mauritania and are countries with the lowest confirmed cases in the region.

    It showed that South Sudan had the lowest confirmed cases of five reported with zero death.

    Mauritania, the dashboard showed, was second country with the lowest confirmed cases with seven reported cases and one death.

    Sao Tome and Principe, the third country with the lowest cases, had recorded eight confirmed cases with zero death.

    Also, the dashboard showed that Nigeria was number five among the countries with the highest cases with 1, 095 confirmed cases and 32 deaths.

  • WHO, world leaders launch $8.6bn plan to provide COVID-19 tools

    WHO, world leaders launch $8.6bn plan to provide COVID-19 tools

    The World Health Organisation (WHO), major world leaders and other stakeholders on Friday launched the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator.

    ACT Accelerator seeks to speed up the development, production and equitable distribution of COVID-18 drugs, tests kits and vaccines around the world.

    About $8.6 billion (N3.2 trillion) is required to implement the plan described by the WHO as a landmark collaboration against the pandemic.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen were among leaders who took part in a video-conference to unveil the plan.

    The Director-General of WHO, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, who hosted the event, said the world was in urgent need of tools being developed in some parts to combat the pandemic.

    Ghebreyesus described the pandemic as a common threat to humanity, and which could only be defeated with a common approach.

    He said past experience had shown that when tools were available, they were not equally accessible to all, and “we cannot allow that to happen”.

    “Our shared commitment is to ensure all people have access to all the tools to defeat COVID-19.

    “The ACT Accelerator brings together the combined power of several organisations to work with speed and scale.

    “Each of us are doing great work, but we cannot work alone,” he said.

    In his remarks, Macron pledged the commitment of France to the initiative, and called for global cooperation and backing for its success.

    The French president said he hoped the United States and China put their differences aside in support of ACT Accelerator.

    President of the European Commission, Leyen, said a pledging conference would hold on May 4 to raise the $8.6 billion needed for the plan.

    In his remarks, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said the world needed the “most massive public health effort in history” to be free of COVID-19.

    “The world needs the development, production and equitable delivery of safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine, therapeutics and diagnostics.

    “Not a vaccine or treatments for one country or one region or one-half of the world, but a vaccine and treatment that are affordable, safe, effective, easily-administered and universally available, for everyone, everywhere.

    “Data must be shared, production capacity prepared, resources mobilised, communities engaged, and politics set aside,” he said.

    Speaking on behalf of the African Union, President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa and Chairman of the regional bloc, said the world needed solidarity now more than ever to defeat the virus.

    Ramaphosa said although the entire world was experiencing the consequences of the disease, Africa was “extremely vulnerable” to its ravages.

    He solicited global support and assistance to the continent to mitigate the impact of the pandemic, while pledging the commitment of the AU to the initiative. (NAN)

  • WHO warns that malaria deaths in Africa could double in 2020

    WHO warns that malaria deaths in Africa could double in 2020

    The number of malaria deaths in Africa could double to 769,000 this year, as efforts to curb the disease are disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Health Organisation (WHO) warned Thursday.

    The region has more than 25,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with more than 1,200 deaths, and governments working with partners such as the WHO are focusing on tackling the pandemic.

    WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, called on all countries to ensure that essential malaria prevention work continues.

    “A recent analysis has found that if insecticide-treated bed net distribution stops, and case management reduces, malaria deaths in sub-Saharan Africa could double in comparison to 2018

    “This would be the highest number of deaths seen in the region since the year 2000,” Moeti said at a briefing.

    She pointed to statistics from Africa’s Ebola outbreak showing that more people died of other diseases, including malaria, than from Ebola itself, due to lack of access to treatment.

    “Let us not repeat that again with COVID-19,” she said.

    In 2018, there were 213 million malaria cases and 360,000 related deaths in the African region, accounting for over 90 per cent of global cases.

    The WHO said that if the focus on slowing the spread of the new coronavirus leads to a reduction by three quarters of access to anti-malaria medicines, deaths could double to 769,000.

    “Countries across the region have a critical window of opportunity to minimize disruptions in malaria prevention and treatment and save lives at this stage of the COVID-19 outbreak,” the WHO said in a statement.

    The doubling of the number of deaths represents the worst case scenario, which also assumes the suspension of all distribution of treated mosquito nets due to the pandemic, the WHO said.

    Benin, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone and Chad have all initiated anti-malaria programmes during the pandemic, the WHO said, adding that should serve as a model for other nations on the continent.

  • China to give WHO $30 million more after US freezes funds

    China to give WHO $30 million more after US freezes funds

    China announced on Thursday it will donate another $30 million to the World Health Organization to help in the global fight against the coronavirus pandemic, days after Washington said it would freeze funding.

    “China has decided to donate another $30 million in cash to the WHO, in addition to the previous donation of $20 million, to support the global fight against COVID-19 and strengthen developing countries’ health systems,” foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a regular press briefing.

    He added that China’s contribution to the UN agency “reflects the support and trust of the Chinese government and people for the WHO”.

    The US, which is the WHO’s biggest contributor, accused the WHO last week of “mismanaging” the COVID-19 crisis, drawing ire from Beijing as both countries spar over the deadly virus.

    In announcing the funding freeze last week, US President Donald Trump accused the WHO of covering up the seriousness of the COVID-19 outbreak in China before it spread.

    Trump said US taxpayers provided between $400 million and $500 million per year to the WHO, while “in contrast, China contributes roughly $40 million a year and even less”.

  • WHO warns ‘long way to go’ in coronavirus crisis

    WHO warns ‘long way to go’ in coronavirus crisis

    The global coronavirus crisis will not end any time soon, with many countries still in the early stages of the fight, health experts have warned as researchers revealed the first US deaths from the disease came weeks before the alarm was raised there.

    The COVID-19 pandemic has killed more than 180,000 people and infected 2.6 million, and nations are struggling to check its spread with social distancing measures and lockdowns, while trying to repair their virus-ravaged economies.

    Some have started to slowly ease restrictions as pressure mounts on governments to find ways to reopen their societies after tens of millions of jobs were wiped out.

    But World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Wednesday cautioned that the struggle is far from over.

    “Make no mistake: we have a long way to go. This virus will be with us for a long time,” he said.

    “Most countries are still in the early stages of their epidemics. And some that were affected early in the pandemic are now starting to see a resurgence in cases.”

    The comments came after the director of the US Centers for Disease Control asked Americans to prepare for a second, possibly more devastating, wave of coronavirus infections.

    The United States is the hardest-hit country on the planet, with more than 46,500 coronavirus deaths and nearly 840,000 infections.

    Researchers have now revealed that the first COVID-19 fatalities in the country happened weeks earlier than previously thought — meaning the current US tally is likely far short of reality.

    The newly confirmed COVID-19 deaths on February 6 and February 17 were in California’s Santa Clara county, where Stanford University researchers found that the true number cases was at least 50 times higher than the confirmed official figure.

    But pressure is growing on authorities to ease restrictions to boost the economy, which is reeling from the pandemic.

    President Donald Trump, who is keen to restart the US economy, issued rare criticism of a Republican state governor on Wednesday, after Georgia allowed small businesses to reopen.

    “It’s too soon,” the president said.

    The explosion of coronavirus cases across the United States has overwhelmed healthcare facilities, from the most developed parts like New York City to the Native American territory of the Navajo Nation in the southwest, where a lack of running water and poor infrastructure has made the situation worse.

    “Right here in the middle of the most powerful nation, the United States of America, our citizens don’t have the luxury of turning on a faucet to wash your hands with soap and water,” Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez told AFP.

    Vaccine trials
    The WHO and other health experts have warned that strict containment measures like lockdowns should remain until there is a viable treatment or vaccine for the coronavirus.

    There was a ray of hope on that front in Europe, where Germany announced Wednesday that human trials for a vaccine will start by next week.

    It is only the fifth such effort to have been authorised worldwide, and is a significant step in making a vaccine “available as soon as possible”, Germany’s regulatory body said.

    But even at the current, rapid pace of development, an effective prophylactic could be several months away.

    In Europe — where the death toll climbed past 110,000 — some countries have slightly eased coronavirus measures, but bans on large gatherings have been extended.

    Finland said it would maintain a ban on gatherings of more than 500 people until the end of July, while hard-hit Spain said it did not expect to lift its strict lockdown until mid-May.

    “We must be incredibly careful in this phase,” said Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

    Vietnamese authorities eased social distancing measures as cases in the country plateaued, with experts saying the apparent success was down to aggressive containment measures and contact tracing.

    Vietnam’s Communist government has reported just 268 coronavirus cases and no deaths, despite its long and porous border with China — where the virus first emerged late last year.

    ‘I feel helpless’
    The pressure on governments everywhere to ease the economic pain is growing by the day, with tens of millions unemployed and several countries at risk of famine.

    With movement and travel severely restricted, sectors from small business to tourism and aviation have been hammered.

    Providing more evidence of the scale of devastation, the UN’s International Civil Aviation Organization said Wednesday the pandemic could mean 1.2 billion fewer passengers worldwide, with hundreds of billions of dollars slashed off airline revenues.

    The economic suffering is intense for the people of Dharavi, the largest slum in India, who have been unable to leave home to eke out a living as factory workers or maids and chauffeurs to the well-heeled residents of Mumbai.

    Home to an estimated one million people, the massive slum has been under a strict lockdown, with police drones patrolling to make sure no one goes outside.

    “I feel helpless at times and worry about my family and neighbourhood,” one Dharavi resident, in hospital for COVID-19 treatment, told AFP.

    “Looking at so many people losing lives due to infections makes me feel terrible. Will we ever recover from this?”

  • Passing the buck to WHO not the right thing to do in fighting COVID-19

    Passing the buck to WHO not the right thing to do in fighting COVID-19

    Solidarity and cooperation are what countries should go after in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic. However, at the critical moment, the U.S. announced to suspend funding to the World Health Organization (WHO), ducking its duty and obligation to safeguard global public health security. The practice tramples on the principle of multilateralism and totally goes against the humanitarian spirit.

    The damage of the so-called “American exceptionalism” threw a wet blanket on the world’s joint efforts to combat the novel coronavirus and drew wide criticism from the international society.

    It is “not the time to reduce the resources for the operations of the World Health Organization or any other humanitarian organization in the fight against the virus,” said United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

    Josep Borrell, European Union (EU) High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy recently said on social media that there is no reason justifying this move at a moment when their efforts are needed more than ever to help contain and mitigate the coronavirus pandemic.

    African Union Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat said the U.S. government decision to suspend funding to WHO is deeply regrettable.

    When the COVID-19 pandemic is posing severe challenges, countries with vulnerable public health systems are in dire need of assistance. Therefore, to ensure that the WHO fully executes its duties is a common responsibility of all countries in the world. Developing countries would be the largest victims if the UN health body is crippled.

    Editor-in-Chief of The Lancet Richard Horton called the U.S. decision “a crime against humanity.”

    The White House’s defunding also triggered resistance and condemnation in the U.S. The president of the American Medical Association Patrice Harris said in a statement that halting funding to the WHO is a dangerous step in the wrong direction that will not make defeating COVID-19 easier. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also blasted the decision, saying it is dangerous, illegal and will be swiftly challenged.

    The attempts of the White House to undermine the WHO and its leadership in the middle of a pandemic are “dangerous and totally inappropriate”, Stephen Morrison was quoted as saying by the Washington Post. The defunding is the latest move from a series of actions taken by the U.S. against multilateral organizations, said CNN in a recent article.

    More and more people are coming to realize that the U.S., shifting blames to the WHO and politicizing the pandemic, is totally unjustified.

    As the most authoritative and professional international organization in the sphere of global public health, the WHO plays an irreplaceable role in coping with global public health crisis. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, the organization has actively assumed responsibility, and called on countries to attach high importance to and prepare for the disease at an early date. Its coordination largely facilitated international cooperation on COVID-19 response, and won wide recognition and high appraisal from the international community. The timeline recently released by the WHO introducing its efforts to combat COVID-19 forcefully proved its achievements and efficiency.

    With limited, constantly shifting information to go on, the WHO showed an early, consistent determination to treat the new contagion like the threat it would become, and to persuade others to do the same, said New York Times in a recent editorial. A close look at the record shows that the WHO acted with greater foresight and speed than many national governments, and more than it had shown in previous epidemics, the article added.

    The mainstream of multilateralism and collaboration shall never be changed in the battle against the pandemic. A recent resolution of the UN Assembly stressed the central role of the WHO in the global health and economic crisis, and the G20 extraordinary virtual leaders’ summit on COVID-19 also issued a statement to support the WHO in assuming its responsibility in coordinating global COVID-19 response and further enhance the organization’s roles.

    The international society is generally in support of the WHO. The COVID-19 pandemic is currently accelerating its spread globally, and the WHO needs substantial capital to advance vaccine development, maintain protective supplies for medical staff, and offer assistance to countries with vulnerable health systems.

    Lately, China, the UK, and Finland, as well as organizations including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation have successively donated to the WHO. Besides, many countries voiced support for the organization for its important role in fighting the pandemic. These all indicate the global common aspiration for multilateral cooperation.

    Some politicians in the U.S. are trying to impede the global efforts to defeat the virus, but American citizens and people around the world won’t allow them. The unscrupulousness to pass the buck and practices to undermine international rules will neither scare off the virus nor the international society. Viruses respect no borders, and no country is able to sit back and watch when COVID-19 stays rampant. Only by joint efforts can the world defeat it, and the U.S. shall take its responsibility as a major country.

    (Zhong Sheng is a pen name often used by People’s Daily to express its views on foreign policy.)

  • COVID-19: 81% of countries in Africa have received medical supplies   -WHO

    COVID-19: 81% of countries in Africa have received medical supplies -WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, says 81 per cent of countries in Africa have received medical supplies to support health workers.

    The first UN Solidarity Flight which is part of a larger effort to ship lifesaving medical supplies to 95 countries departed Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to various countries on April 14.

    The UN health agency gave an update on Tuesday on its official twitter account @WHOAFRO.

    “The UN ‘Solidarity Flight’ touching down in Brazzaville, Congo this weekend with the support of World Food Programme (WFP), Jack Ma Foundation, Africa Centre for Disease Control, African Union and Federal Ministry of Health.

    “Eighty one per cent of countries in Africa have received life-saving COVID-19 medical equipment.’’

    The cargo was donated by WHO and the Jack Ma Foundation with logistics and transportation supported by WFP.

    The cargo is transporting face shields, gloves, goggles, gowns, masks, medical aprons and thermometers, as well as ventilators to various countries.

    Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, Director-General of World Health Organisation (WHO) says over the past week, WHO had delivered masks, goggles, test kits, face shields and other medical equipment to 40 countries.

    In a statement posted on WHO website, Ghebreyesus said that the Organisation had been working closely with the WFP to deliver the medical supplies.

    “This is part of the overarching drive to keep supply chains moving and ensure key supplies reach 120 priority countries.

    “Through April and May, we intend to ship almost 180 million surgical masks, 54 million N95 masks and more than three million protective goggles to countries that need them most.

    “I also want to highlight the Jack Ma Foundation’s donation of 100 million masks, 1 million N95 masks and one million test kits to WHO.

    “We had a very productive discussion with Jack Ma yesterday and he would like to continue to support countries in need,’’ he said,

    According to him, solidarity flights continue to ship lifesaving medical supplies across Africa to protect health workers, who are on the frontlines in the effort to save lives and slow the pandemic.

  • BREAKING: WHO declares yellow fever outbreak in South Sudan

    BREAKING: WHO declares yellow fever outbreak in South Sudan

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared an outbreak of yellow fever in the southern part of South Sudan.

    The UN health agency said, in a statement, that two cases were identified in Kajo-keji, a region bordering Uganda, where an outbreak of the viral haemorrhagic disease was detected early this year.

    WHO warned that the risk of ongoing and further transmission of yellow fever is a concern in South Sudan due to spontaneous return of displaced persons from Uganda.

    There are also concerns of gaps in surveillance and weaknesses in health services, ongoing travel restrictions imposed because of the COVID-19 and the onset of the rainy season, which provides a favourable breeding ground for mosquitos that spread the virus.

    “Epidemic spread of yellow fever is a risk in South Sudan as the estimated overall population immunity is negligible with nearly zero per cent immunity in Kajo Keji,’’ WHO said.

    To respond to the outbreak, the Ministry of Health of South Sudan, with support from the WHO, planned to launch a reactive vaccination campaign in the affected region.

    It also proposed the implementation of preventive mass vaccination campaigns by 2022.

    South Sudan has experienced several yellow fever outbreaks in the past few years.

    The country’s worst yellow fever outbreak occurred in May 2003, when a total of 178 cases with 27 deaths were reported in the Imatong region.

  • 5G mobile networks do not spread COVID-19 – WHO

    5G mobile networks do not spread COVID-19 – WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) says that viruses cannot travel on radio waves or mobile networks, saying COVID-19 is a respiratory disease.

    WHO through a statement on Friday, debunked the myth, adding that COVID-19 was spread through respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs, sneezes or speaks.

    “People can also be infected by touching a contaminated surface and then their eyes, mouth or nose,” it said.

    WHO added that COVID-19 was spreading in many countries that did not have 5G mobile networks.

    It also said being infected with the new Coronavirus did not mean that the person would be infected with the virus forever, adding that people recovered from the disease.

    “Most  COVID-19  infected persons can recover and eliminate the virus from their bodies.

    “If you are infected by the disease, make sure you treat your symptoms.

    “If you have cough, fever, and difficulty breathing, seek medical care early, but call your health facility by telephone first.

    “Most patients recover thanks to supportive care,” WHO said.

    It added that exposure to the sun or to temperatures higher than 25C degrees would not prevent COVID-19.

    “You can be infected with  COVID-19, no matter how sunny or hot the weather is. Countries with hot weather have reported cases of COVID-19,” the organisation noted.

    It said to be protected from the virus, people should ensure frequent and thorough hand washing and avoid touching eyes, mouth, and nose. 

  • UN defends WHO against allegation of being China-centric on COVID-19

    UN defends WHO against allegation of being China-centric on COVID-19

    The United Nations (UN) has defended the World Health Organisation (WHO) against criticisms that it gave bad advice during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in China.

    The criticisms were coming from U.S. politicians, including President Donald Trump, who alleged on Tuesday evening that WHO was “China-centric”.

    Speaking at the daily coronavirus taskforce news briefing in Washington, Trump accused the global health body of being too focused on China.

    The president said the organisation made the wrong decisions about the initial coronavirus outbreak, including advising against border closure against China.

    “The WHO blew it, they really blew it, for some reason, funded largely by the United States, yet very China centric. We will be giving that a good look.

    “Fortunately, I rejected their advice on keeping our borders open to China early on. Why did they give us such a faulty recommendation?”

    “We are going to put a hold on money spent to WHO. We’re going to put a very powerful hold on it and we’re gonna see.

    “They seem to err always on the side of China, we will look at ending funding because you know they called it wrong,” he said.

    But spokesperson to the UN Secretary-General, Mr Stephane Dujarric, dismissed the criticism, saying WHO had done “tremendous work on COVID-19”.

    “For the Secretary-General, it is clear that WHO, under the leadership of Dr Tedros, has done tremendous work on COVID-19.

    “This includes supporting countries with millions of equipment being shipped out, on helping countries with training, on providing global guidelines.

    “WHO is showing the strength of the international health system,” he told newsmen in New York.

    Before Trump’s comments, some U.S. lawmakers had asked WHO Director-General, Tedros Ghebreyesus, to resign for allegedly allowing China to cover up the true impact of the disease.

    Republican Senator Martha McSally said that the 3,331 deaths reported by the Chinese government was far less than the actual figure.

    Speaking on Fox News, McSally said WHO D-G should be partly blamed for China’s lack of transparency in its reporting of the outbreak.

    “Dr Tedros deceived the world. At one point, he even praised China’s ‘transparency during its coronavirus response efforts.

    “This was despite a mountain of evidence showing the regime concealed the severity of the outbreak. This deception cost lives,” she said.

    Texan Republican Senator, Ted Cruz, also called on WHO to consider replacing the director-general.

    Cruz said WHO had “consistently bent to the will of the Chinese Communist Party at the expense containing the spread of the coronavirus”.

    According to British newspaper, Daily Daily, when China reported 17,238 infections and 361 deaths in February, Ghebreyesus said there was no need for other countries to shut their borders against it.

    He said measures that “unnecessarily interfere with international travel and trade” were not needed in trying to halt the spread of the virus, the paper reported.

    The report further stated that the D-G on March 20 praised the Chinese government for the lack of new domestic #COVID19 cases.

    China has recorded 3,331 COVID-19 deaths and 81,708 infections, but many have speculated that this number is much higher and that China is trying to cover up the true reality of the spread, according to the paper.(NAN)