Livingstone, Zambia - In advance of World Malaria Day on
Friday, several African countries called for a joint international
initiative to combat the disease which kills more than 1 million
people each year, mostly young children in Africa.
'We want the people in the North who aren't affected by malaria to
know about the devastating effects of the disease and to get
involved,' Awa-Maria Coll-Seck, director of Roll Back Malaria told a
meeting of southern African health ministers and their deputies in
Livingstone in Zambia.
A series of events to raise awareness around one of the world's
big killer diseases, which was eradicated in wealthy countries
several decades ago, is taking place in Livingstone to mark the first
ever World Malaria Day.
Every 30 seconds in Africa a child dies from malaria, with low-
lying areas, like the Zambezi river valley, that are prone to
flooding during the summer rainy season particularly affected.
The Zambezi, Africa's fourth largest river, winds through Angola
and along the borders of Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia before
flowing out to sea through Mozambique.
A German journalist, Helge Bendl, who has been travelling the
river for the last month as part of an expedition to distribute anti-
malaria material and raise awareness about the disease told the
conference of the difficulty for riverine populations in accessing
treatment.
Villagers who contract malaria sometimes have to travel 80
kilometres by boat, through crocodile-infested waters, to receive
medical attention, Bendl said.
Malaria is still a major public health problem in some 90
countries, including India, where it has made a comeback in recent
years. Every 30 seconds a child in Africa dies from the disease.
Donor spending on malaria prevention and treatment has rocketed in
recent years, thanks partly to a special focus from US President
George W Bush and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
The money has gone mainly towards the mass distribution of treated
bed nets; the rollout of new, more effective combination therapies
and vaccine research.
Promising results from clinical trials in Mozambique last year of
a vaccine have led some donors to start talking up the possibility of
finally swatting malaria.
The trial showed infants who received the vaccine were 65 per cent
less likely to contract malaria.
Zambian Health Minister Brian Chituwo stressed the importance of
cross-border initiatives to contain the disease in southern Africa
given, as anti-malaria campaigner Louis da Gama once noted,
'mosquitoes don't stop at borders.'
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