AFP |
The UK government
and US philanthropist Bill Gates have announced a $4bn
(£3bn) initiative to try to eradicate malaria.
BBC
Africa Live report continues:
The
programme will focus on the development of new drugs and insecticides to combat
the mosquito-borne disease.
In
a joint article in the London-based Times newspaper, Mr Gates and
UK Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, say they are optimistic
malaria can be wiped out in their lifetime.
They
say the disease kills a child every minute - mostly in Africa - and is both a
cause and a consequence of poverty.
There were 438,000 malaria deaths in 2015, most of them of children aged under five, and the majority of them in Africa, according to the WHO/AFPLondon, Jan 25 |
Britain And Bill
Gates Announce £3bn To Fight Malaria
AFP
reports that Chancellor of the Exchequer and tech billionaire Bill Gates
unveiled a plan to spend billions to defeat “the world’s deadliest killer”
malaria on Monday.
Chancellor
George Osborne and Gates announced £3 billion (US$4.28 billion) in funding over
the next five years for research and to support efforts to eliminate the
mosquito-borne disease, in a joint article in The Times.
“When
it comes to human tragedy, no creature comes close to the devastation caused by
the mosquito,” the two wrote.
“We
both believe that a malaria-free world has to be one of the highest global
health priorities.”
The
fund would be made up of £500 million a year from Britain’s overseas aid budget
for the next five years, as well as US$200 million this year from The Gates
Foundation, with more donations to follow.
There
were 438,000 malaria deaths in 2015, most of them of children aged under five,
and the majority of them in Africa, according to the World Health Organization.
Efforts
to control the disease have made significant progress in the last 15 years, but
are threatened by the spread of resistance to antimalarial drugs and to
insecticide, the WHO said in its World Malaria Report 2015.
“If
new insecticides are not introduced by 2020, the situation will become critical
and deaths could surge,” Osborne and Gates wrote, adding that fighting diseases
required collaboration between private companies, governments and charities.
“We
are optimistic that in our lifetimes we can eradicate malaria and other deadly
tropical diseases, and confront emerging threats, making the world a safer
place for all,” the article concluded.
It comes days after the philanthropist Gates announced plans for a US$100 million scheme to cut malnutrition in Nigeria.
It comes days after the philanthropist Gates announced plans for a US$100 million scheme to cut malnutrition in Nigeria.
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