Malaria: Dangote, Bill Gates, Chambers inaugurate ‘End Malaria Council’

 

THE struggle to end malaria in Nigeria has entered a new global phase with Nigerian Champion of the struggle, Aliko Dangote teaming up with other influential private and public leaders at the just concluded World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos to form End Malaria Council, a platform to ensure malaria eradication assumes a top global priority.

The End Malaria Council is meant to drive global attention and funding to wipe out the disease for good.

Dangote, a foremost entrepreneur has always canvassed for concerted efforts to rid Nigeria and Africa of malaria which he said decimates the African workforce and the young ones, thus slowing down its economic growth. According to him, the world without malaria is possible and that it is a challenge to all.

Other prominent persons on the Council with Dangote are Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Ray Chambers, the United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Health in Agenda 2030 and for Malaria and six others.

Dangote, who has been using his Dangote Foundation as a platform to fight malaria said the inauguration of the Council is another critical milestone in the fight against malaria. He promised to join others to collectively tackle malaria saying he was ready to commit himself and his resources into the fight.

He described malaria as a preventable disease and therefore all should be done to collaborate on how to deal with it.

While expressing happiness that successes are being recorded with the active support and participation of world leaders in government and business, the Nigerian Malaria Ambassador noted the success achieved so far was key to stimulation of the nation’s economy as the potential productive sector of the population are the vulnerable groups.

In his comment on the Council, Bill Gates who co-authored a report with Chambers in 2015 called Aspiration to Action: What will it take to end malaria?, said “the next chapter of the fight against malaria starts now.

Gates added that “For the first time in history, we have a roadmap to a world without malaria – where no one has to die from a mosquito bite ever again. With renewed focus, innovation and new commitments of leadership and funding, we can be the generation to end malaria once and for all.”

The launch of the End Malaria Council comes just a month after the release of the World Health Organization’s 2016 World Malaria Report, which showed remarkable progress in reducing cases and deaths from malaria since 2000, but also underscored the urgent need for global leadership, new funding and innovation to stay on track to meet targets.

Members of the End Malaria Council are expected to work in collaboration with the Roll Back Malaria Partnership and other key partners to help countries and regions achieve their malaria control and elimination goals. Members of this unique group will use their voices and networks to support the work already underway by malaria field workers, scientists and experts by focusing on three areas: building political will, mobilizing resources and supporting the development of new tools to find, prevent and treat malaria.

The Council has nine founding members, a group of whom met on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland to discuss strategies for filling critical financing gaps in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The End Malaria Council will grow to represent all of the key malaria-endemic regions. Inaugural members include.

Other Council members are Peter Chernin, Founder, Chernin Entertainment and The Chernin Group, Idriss Déby, President, Republic of Chad (representing the African Leaders Malaria Alliance), Jakaya Kikwete, Former President, United Republic of Tanzania, Graça Machel, Founder, Foundation for Community Development, Mozambique, Luis Alberto Moreno, President, Inter-American Development Bank and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President, Republic of Liberia.

It would be recalled that Dangote had on the platform of his Dangote Foundation galvanized stakeholders, including the central government to embark on the strategy code named Malaria Zero, an ambitious programme  to eliminate Malaria by 2020 in Nigeria.

Then the stakeholders at the inaugural meeting sponsored by Dangote foundation in Lagos launched what they called the Private Sector Engagement Strategy against Malaria (PSESM), which appealed to the Private Sector to join the movement and save lives of Nigerians and spare the nation of an estimated annual economic loss of $2.4 billion.

The engagement sought to organize the Private sector operators to help the government out in the efforts at stamping out malaria in Nigeria totally, because the government alone could not succeed without the assistance of the corporate firms.