Close Menu
  • Home
  • Free Gifts
  • Self Help
  • Make Money
  • Video
  • Hot Deals
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Judge Blocks Trump From Invading Portland
  • Rafiatu Lawal sets record at World Championships
  • When the victim isn’t perfect
  • Emmett Till’s Cousin, Priscilla Williams-Till, Runs For U.S. Senate
  • ‘The fear was immense’: al-Shabaab exploits fragmented politics to reclaim land in Somalia | Somalia
  • ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa
  • Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective
  • Top 10 Safest Countries in Africa 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube TikTok
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Demo
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Society
    1. Art and Culture
    2. Education
    3. Family & Relationship
    4. View All

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025

    Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective

    October 4, 2025

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025

    The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa

    October 2, 2025

    Nepal’s Gen Z reckoning

    September 29, 2025

    Rising Political Frustration in Zambia

    September 26, 2025

    10 Mistakes I Made Navigating Theological Differences

    September 23, 2025

    Vacancies: AMALI Research Officer/Senior Research Officer

    September 20, 2025

    ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa

    October 5, 2025

    Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya

    October 2, 2025

    Tokyo scores on policy but loses on scale | Article

    September 17, 2025

    South Sudan vice-president charged with murder and treason

    September 11, 2025

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025

    ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa

    October 5, 2025

    Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective

    October 4, 2025

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025
  • Lifestyle
    1. Foods & Recipes
    2. Health & Fitness
    3. Travel & Tourism
    Featured
    Recent

    Judge Blocks Trump From Invading Portland

    October 6, 2025

    Rafiatu Lawal sets record at World Championships

    October 6, 2025

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025
  • International
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • Oceania
    • South America
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Home»Uncategorized»Africa: 33 Former African Heads of State Speak Out Against UK Withdrawal of Neglected Tropical Disease Funding
Uncategorized

Africa: 33 Former African Heads of State Speak Out Against UK Withdrawal of Neglected Tropical Disease Funding

King JajaBy King JajaJune 30, 2021No Comments0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Africa: 33 Former African Heads of State Speak Out Against UK Withdrawal of Neglected Tropical Disease Funding
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Following is a statement from the Forum for Former African Heads of State and Government as 33 former African heads of state appeal for international solidarity in response to the UK’s withdrawal of neglected tropical disease funding. The UK government has decided to withdraw £150 million in funding to tackle these diseases – funding that would have delivered over 250 million treatments this year alone. The UK’s decision effectively abandons over 200 million of Africa’s poorest and most vulnerable people that it promised to support. Out of the 26 countries affected by these aid cuts, 24 are in Africa.

33 Former African Heads of State Appeal for International Solidarity In Response To UK Withdrawal Of Neglected Tropical Disease Funding

Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are a global success story, with 43 countries having eliminated an NTD. However, the UK government has decided to withdraw £150 million in funding to tackle these diseases – funding that would have delivered over 250 million treatments this year alone. In response, 33 former heads of state have called upon the “international community and humanitarian assistance agencies to mobilize the requisite aid resources in an attempt to avoid further loss of life.”

Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) like blinding trachoma and intestinal worms are preventable and treatable, yet they still affect 1.7 billion people around the world. By preventing children from going to school and adults from being able to work, NTDs trap individuals and whole communities in cycles of extreme poverty.

The UK’s decision to withdraw funding effectively abandons over 200 million of Africa’s poorest and most vulnerable people that it promised to support. Out of the 26 countries affected by these aid cuts, 24 are in Africa.

The cuts will mean exiting from supporting interventions against visceral leishmaniasis – a fatal disease which causes swelling of the spleen and liver, 50% of the global burden of which is in East Africa. Similarly, loss of funding to tackle diseases like Guinea worm, blinding trachoma and elephantiasis could cause unnecessary setbacks for the poorest communities in Africa.

In a statement from the Forum for Former African Heads of State and Government, the former heads of state note that the impact “should be evaded through the collective efforts at national, sub-regional and continental levels”.

As African countries continue to manage the pandemic, it is essential that national governments can continue work with partners such as the UK to protect and support vulnerable people on the continent. The Africa Forum is prepared to work collaboratively “to mobilize support, particularly regarding to access to medical care and supplies, infrastructure, and quality health education as well as food and nutrition for those living in Africa”.

Please find the full statement from the Forum for Former African Heads of State and Government below:

We, the members of the Forum for Former African Heads of State and Government and other Institutions (Africa Forum), have come together to share our experiences and our moral authority for the benefit of the people of Africa.

Having continuously worked to support the implementation of the overall objective of the African Union (AU) and its policy-making organs, we are very disturbed by the persisting and  devastating effect of the communicable, such as malaria and HIV/AIDS, the noncommunicable or chronic diseases like heart disease and cervical cancer, as well as the neglected tropical diseases like blinding trachoma, leprosy, elephantiasis, and Guinea worm disease, and last but not least the multiple epidemics and pandemics such as Ebola and COVID- 19 that have claimed hundreds of thousands of lives of our people each year.

We, at the Africa Forum have recognised that the regions in Africa affected by the higher emergence and re-emergence of diseases have revealed problems essentially related to poverty, exclusion and poor healthcare leading to exacerbate health problems and deteriorating peace and security desecration thus articulating the impact of the pandemics and diseases on governance, peace and security on the continent.

We express our solidarity with and commitment to helping the AUC, governments and people of the sub-region to mobilize resources and all the required support to alleviate further suffering and to mitigate the impact of the communicable, noncommunicable, neglected tropical diseases and the pandemics.

The Africa Forum feels strongly that such a ferocious calamity should be evaded through the collective efforts at national, sub-regional and continental levels including necessary technical and expert support in the form of early warning by those who have the capacity to do so. We commend the determination by the African governments and institutions within the framework of the AU to cautiously minimize the health impact, as well as the social disruption and economic consequences of the pandemics and diseases.

It is significant to note the partnerships that the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) forged with UNDP and other local and international communities in response to the COVID-19 pandemic including public awareness of the pandemic and importance of whole-of-society partnerships in curbing and recovering from the pandemic. In this regards the Forum would like to express its great satisfaction of the efforts deployed by the Uniting to Combat Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs), which is a global partnership working to raise the visibility of NTDs –diseases that affect over 1.7 billion people on our planet, 600 million of whom in Africa. We also join their effort to prevent undermining years of hard-fought progress toward eliminating NTDs in African countries and risks the possibility of resurgence in areas once free of these devastating diseases and encourage the international community to continue supporting their great intervention on the continent.

The Africa Forum feels strongly that Africa should rise to meet such situations of need and put together mechanisms that will provide rapid assistance and support when such unforeseeable circumstances and situations arise.

We further call upon the international community and humanitarian assistance agencies to mobilize the requisite aid resources and to strengthen the role and also call upon them to redouble their efforts in an attempt to avoid further loss of life. We urge them also to consider post-disease and pandemic reconstruction and development of the affected countries. The Africa Forum is prepared to work with all those of good will on the continent to mobilize support – particularly regarding to access to medical care and supplies, infrastructure, and quality health education as well as food and nutrition for the disease-stricken people living in Africa.

We will continue to work towards preventing or transforming conflicts in Africa because they are, alongside climatic adversities, responsible for the inequitable access to health care resources and creation of famine situations, not only in the conflict affected countries, but also in the neighbouring countries which receive large numbers of refugees.

Issued by the Executive Secretariat of the Africa Forum, Pretoria, Republic of South Africa, June 2021.

 Members of Africa Forum (as of June 2021):

HE Nicephore Dieudonne Soglo, Former President of the Republic of Benin and Vice Chairperson of Africa Forum HE Festus Gontebanye Mogae, Former President of the Republic of Botswana HE Ian Khama, Former President of the Republic of Botswana HE Pedro de Verona Rodrigues Pires, Former President Republic of Cape Verde HE Hailemariam Desalegn Boshe, Former Prime Minister of Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia HE John Kofi Agyekum Kufuor, Former President of the Republic of Ghana HE John Dramani Mahama, Former President of the Republic of Ghana HE Emilio Mwai Kibaki, Former President of the Republic of Kenya HE Prof Amos Claudius Sawyer, Former President of the Republic of Liberia HE Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Former President of the Republic of Liberia HE Dr Bakili Muluzi, Former President of the Republic of Malawi HE Alpha Oumar Konaré, Former President of the Republic of Mali HE Cassam Uteem, Former President of the Republic of Mauritius HE Karl Auguste Offmann, Former President of the Republic of Mauritius HE Joaquim Alberto Chissano, Former President or the Republic of Mozambique and Chairperson of the Africa Forum HE Armando Guebuza, Former President or the Republic of Mozambique HE Samuel Daniel Shafiishuna Nujoma, Former President of the Republic of Namibia HE Hifikepunye Pohamba, Former President of the Republic of Namibia HE Dr Abdul Salam Abubakar, Former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria HE Maththew Olusegum Obasanjo, Former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria HE Gen Dr Yakubu Jack Dan-Yumma Gowon, Former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 22. HE Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan, Former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria HE Miguel Dos Anjos Trovoada, Former President of the Republic of São Tomé and Príncipe HE Fradique Bandeira Melo de Menezes, Former President of the Republic of São Tomé and Príncipe HE Thabo Mbeki, Former President of the Republic of South Africa HE Kgalema Petrus Motlanthe, Former President of the Republic of South Africa HE Ali Hassan Mwinyi, Former President of the Republic of Tanzania HE Jakaya Kikwete, Former President of the United Republic of Tanzania HE Rupiah Bwezani Banda, Former President of the Republic of Zambia HE Chief Eleazar Chukwu Emeka Anyaoku, Former Secretary General of the Commonwealth of Nations HE Donald Kaberuka, Former President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) HE Dr Salim Ahmed Salim, Former Prime Minister of the United Republic of Tanzania and Former Secretary General of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) HE Abdoulie Janneh, Former United Nations Under-Secretary General and Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)

Sign up for free AllAfrica Newsletters
Get the latest in African news delivered straight to your inbox

First Seen Here

african music afrobeat highlife music juju makosam arican dance
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
King Jaja
  • Website

Related Posts

The unstoppable rise of Afrobeats

July 18, 2024

Kidi Begged To Feature Kurl Songx To Revive His ‘Dead’ Music Career

August 5, 2021

ByteDance Lays Off Hundreds After China’s Education Crackdown

August 5, 2021
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

© 2025 Afro Icon. Powered by African People.
  • Home
  • Privacy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact us
  • Terms of Use

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version