Over 33 million children vaccinated against wild poliovirus in southern Africa

A year since Malawi confirmed its first case of wild poliovirus type 1 in 30 years, more than 33 million children across five southern African countries have been vaccinated against the virus, with over 80 million vaccine doses administered over the past year.

A total of nine wild poliovirus cases have been reported so far, with one in Malawi and eight in neighbouring Mozambique since the declaration of an outbreak on 17 February 2022 in Malawi. The last confirmed case to date was in August 2022 in Mozambique. The wild poliovirus in Malawi and Mozambique originated from Pakistan, one of the two last endemic countries.

Concerted emergency response launched following the outbreak in 2022 has helped increase protection among children through vaccines in Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. The countries have also ramped up disease surveillance and community mobilization to help find cases and halt the virus.

“Southern Africa countries have made huge efforts to bolster polio detection, curb the spread of the virus and ensure that children live without the risk of infection and lifelong paralysis,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for Africa. “We continue to support the polio control efforts across the region so that every child receives the protection they need.”

To date, 19 vaccination rounds have been concluded in the most at-risk areas and at least five more are planned for 2023 in the five countries.

Additionally, more than 10 new environmental surveillance sites have been set up over the past year in the affected countries with support from WHO. The fully operational sites are playing a critical role in the efforts to detect silent circulating poliovirus in wastewater.

“Response teams have worked intensely in the fight against polio not only in Malawi but in the rest of the neighbouring countries in a coordinated manner. We will not rest until we reach and vaccinate every child to stop polio transmission,” said Dr Emeka Agbo, acting Country Coordinator for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in Malawi.

Reaching all households where eligible children live is critical to protect them against the risk of paralysis. The national health authorities, with support from the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, efforts are ongoing to map cross-border communities, migratory routes, border crossings and transit routes.

“Community health workers have been pivotal in the vaccination campaigns and will continue going door-to-door, bringing polio vaccines to children who might otherwise be missed,” said Dr Jamal Ahmed, WHO Polio Eradication Programme Manager.

Polio is highly infectious and affects unimmunized or under immunized children. In Malawi and Mozambique, it has paralysed children younger than 15 years. There is no cure for polio, and it can only be prevented by immunization. Children across the world remain at risk of wild polio type 1 as long as the virus is not eradicated in the last remaining areas in which it is still circulating.

Despite the circulation of wild poliovirus type 1 and the variant polioviruses, incredible progress has been made. Since 1988, when the Global Polio Eradication Initiative was set up, polio cases have plummeted by 99% from an estimated annual total of 350 000.

Importation of any case must be treated as a serious concern and high-quality response efforts to reach every child with polio vaccine are critical to prevent further spread.

On 25 January 2023, the WHO Emergency Committee under the International Health Regulations concluded that the risk of international spread of poliovirus remains a public health emergency of international concern.

Source: World Health Organization

Adaptation and Mitigation Efforts Must be Enhanced to Address Climate-Induced Displacement: IOM DG

The International Organization of Migration (IOM) Director General António?Vitorino has called for enhanced adaptation and mitigation initiatives to address climate-induced displacement underscoring the importance of stronger partnership among states.

Speaking at a high-level event on the margins of the ongoing 36th African Union Summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, DG Vitorino noted that last year’s the Sharm El Sheik Climate Change Conference emphasized the importance of global solidarity to improve adaptation, mitigation and preparedness, early warning as well as to build the resilience of communities.

"UN Secretary General António?Guterres in Sharm El Sheik made an appeal to double the funding allocated for adaptation and mitigation.” DG Vitorino said. “This corresponds to IOM's field experience, which demonstrates that people do not want to move but are forced to relocate. If given the choice, they would prefer to stay in the places where their ancestors have lived and where their historical cultures are ingrained.”

Most African countries continue to bear the brunt of the adverse effects of climate change. The East and Horn of Africa in particular is experiencing more frequent and increasingly intense extreme weather events.

The Kampala Ministerial Declaration on Migration, Environment and Climate Change signed by 15 African Member States in the region in July 2022 is one of the most significant frameworks that demonstrate a whole-of-government approach, but also the knowledgeable and proactive outlook of the governments in this region.

DG Vitorino emphasised the need for context-specific adaptation and resilience building solutions especially in the East and Horn of Africa where millions remain dependent on natural resources for their livelihoods, adding that guidelines for obtaining financing to support adaptation must be made more flexible.

Five consecutive failed rainy seasons have led to a historic drought that has displaced over half a million people in Ethiopia, while 4.5 million people in Kenya and nearly 8 million people in Somalia – half the population of the country – are in need of humanitarian assistance. The high-level event was organized by the Governments of Kenya, Mozambique, and Portugal in collaboration with the African Union Commission and IOM.

Source: International Organization for Migration

US sends strong delegation to African Union summit in Addis

WASHINGTON/ADDIS ABABA— The US is sending a strong delegation of special envoys to Addis Ababa this week for the annual African Union Summit (Feb 18-19) in the Ethiopian capital, as it seeks role in the continent’s matters.

The Department of State announced that the delegation will “meet with stakeholders to discuss the global food security crisis and its disproportionate impact on Africa, as well as to follow up on US commitments made at the US-Africa Leaders’ Summit”.

The US gathered African leaders in December last year in Washington for a summit that sought to improve partnerships.

The Delegation is led by Molly Phee, the US assistant secretary for Africa, and former US ambassador to Kenya Johnnie Carson, now the Special Presidential Representative for US-Africa Leaders’ Summit Implementation.

Others include US Special Envoy for Global Food Security Cary Fowler, USAid Assistant Administrator in the Bureau for Africa Monde Muyangwa, acting USAid Assistant to the Administrator for the Bureau of Resilience and Food Security Dina Esposito, and US Global Aids Coordinator and Special Representative for Health Diplomacy John Nkengasong.

Dr. Nkengasong was until last year the director for the Africa Union Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa-CDC), the AU’s public health agency.

“The US delegation will reinforce US commitment to advance food security and highlight the ongoing work through the US government’s Feed the Future initiative, and efforts to scale up work on climate-resilient agriculture and soil health, including upcoming work on the “Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils” (VACS),” a statement said.

Heads of state and governments of AU member states are gathering in Addis Ababa as the continental body marks 20 years since it was re-formed from the old Organisation of African Unity (OAU). According to the programme, leaders will be meeting under the theme ‘The Year of AfCFTA: Acceleration of the African Continental Free Trade Area Implementation’.

But the Assembly of Heads of State and Government will also look into continual problems “and make far-reaching decisions on various political and socio-economic areas to promote and advance the welfare and quality of life for the African citizenry”, according to the programme.

Some of the issues will fall under the institutional reforms of the African Union, peace and security and the missed deadline to silence guns, global financial and energy issues and the food crisis, response to Covid-19, climate change and Agenda 2063.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Africa Region | Hunger Crisis – Operation Update #2 – Emergency Appeal (MGR60001)

Description of the crisis

The Hunger Crisis, like other crises and disasters, has exacerbated pre-existing inequalities, discriminations and violence which pose critical protection risks, especially to those most vulnerable and at high risk, including but not limited to women, children, people with disabilities, elderly, single or child-headed household.

Across the region, millions of people are living in poverty and facing multiple daily threats to their food security. An estimated 146 million people are facing crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity in sub-Saharan Africa. Climatic shocks, such as prolonged drought and recurrent flooding, conflict, desert locusts, and economic downturns, exacerbated by the effects of COVID-19, have combined to hit communities hard. The impact of global drivers is compounding the effect of pre-existing deep-rooted local drivers such as poverty and marginalisation.

Warnings about the hunger crisis in Africa were issued over a year ago by African Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies who have launched emergency appeals. So far, 17 National Societies have responded with limited resources, but more funding is needed to scale up the response. The IFRC must increase life-saving aid to those facing acute food insecurity and address the root causes of the crisis with longer-term commitments.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) has noted a concerning pattern in the eastern Horn of Africa, with five consecutive dry seasons officially recorded, marking the longest dry spell ever recorded in the region. The poor rainy season across Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia was forecasted by FEWS NET and other agencies, due to the historic below-average March-May 2022 season. FEWS NET's latest Somalia Seasonal Monitor reveals significant delays in the start of rains, irregular rain distribution, and significant rainfall deficiencies throughout the country, with the October-December 2022 rainfall totals well below what is required for productive crops and rangeland. The multi-year drought, caused by La Niña conditions, is anticipated to persist into 2023, with a possibility of a drier-than-normal wet season in March-May 2023 because of warm sea surface temperatures in the west Pacific.

Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies

Children Rescued by Multinational Force in West Africa

A multinational force of troops from Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria, on Thursday handed five children rescued from Boko Haram over to Cameroon. The Multinational Joint Task Force of the Lake Chad Basin Commission says scores of children were rescued last year in operations against the militant group. Cameroonian authorities are working to locate the children's parents.

The Multinational Joint Task Force of the Lake Chad Basin, or MNJTF, that is fighting the jihadist group, says the five children it handed to Cameroonian authorities on Thursday were rescued by Chadian troops.

The children were handed over to government officials in Mora, a town in Cameroon's Far North region on the border with Chad and Nigeria.

The task force said Chadian troops found the five boys in the volatile Lake Chad basin, looking unkempt, tired, hungry and sick.

The task force commander, Nigerian Major General Abdul Kalifa Ibrahim, said the teenage children spent several months in Boko Haram captivity. He spoke on Cameroon's state broadcaster CRTV.

"They were unfortunate to be abducted by Boko Haram, but they were able to escape," said Ibrahim. "Chadian soldiers found out they are Cameroonian children. We are going to carry out more operations. Our hope is for the Boko Harams themselves to come out and say this is enough."

Cameroon says 25 out of the 60 children transferred to the country by the joint forces in the past three weeks were either saved by the military during operations or escaped from Boko Haram camps and surrendered to troops from Cameroon, Chad and Nigeria fighting the jihadists.

The task force says scores of the children were rescued last year in a military operation that killed 800 militants in lake Chad basin. The children were kept in Chad about 8 months for psychological care and to determine where they were from.

The government says the children range in age from 9 to 17 years old.

The governor of Cameroon’s Far North region, Midjiyawa Bakari, says Cameroonian President Paul Biya has ordered that the children be provided with food, medical care and an education while their parents are being found. He spoke to VOA via a messaging app from Maroua, capital of Cameroon's Far North region.

Bakari says Cameroon has well-constructed centers for Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration, or DDR, in Meri and Mora, northern towns on the border with Chad and Nigeria. He says the children will be enrolled in a school at the DDR center in Mora. Bakari says Cameroons medical staff members are at DDR centers ready to attend to the health needs of the children.

Bakari said in 2021, Cameroon successfully hosted more than 2,000 former Boko Haram militants including 950 Nigerians and about a hundred Chadians who defected from the jihdist group.

In June 2022, the Multinational Joint Task Force said 3,000 troops killed 800 jihadis on Lake Chad's islands and neighboring areas between March 28 and June 4 in an operation called Lake Sanity.

Officials of the force said they were investigating the countries of origins of several hundred children who were rescued in the operations.

The troops say parents of some of the children may have been killed in battles with jihadist groups or have remained in Boko Haram camps as militants or captives.

The Lake Chad basin stretches across the borders of Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad.

The multinational force with troops from Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad says although attacks have been drastically reduced, Boko Haram and another group, the Islamic State West Africa Province, have established bases in the vast Lake Chad basin.

According to the U.N., 36,000 people have been killed and 3 million have fled their homes in Cameroon, Nigeria and Chad since 2009 when the fighting deteriorated into an armed conflict with Nigerian government troops.

Source: Voice of America