Yvonne Chaka Chaka launches new anti-malaria foundation


  1.  Leading South African singer, Yvonne Chaka Chaka, known throughout the region as the 'Princess of Africa,' on Thursday launched a new foundation here to improve accountability and transparency in the use of funds dedicated to fighting malaria on the continent.This was one of the key recommendations from a UK All Party Parliamentary Malaria Group (APPMG) report on financing, which is being launched in London today (Thursday) by the British Secretary of State for International Development, Hilary Benn.
    malaria
    Accompanied by World Bank Group President, Paul Wolfowitz, Chaka Chaka, who is also UNICEF's Goodwill Ambassador for Malaria, urged donors, recipient countries, development agencies, and other members of the Roll Back Malaria Initiative to ensure that funds earmarked for malaria were used transparently and delivered measurable results.
    She also called on African nations and donors to deliver on their promises to better fight malaria, with fewer deaths and less illness caused by the mosquito-borne disease.
     
    "We will serve as a catalyst in the emergence of an empowered African community which is highly knowledgeable about malaria, its causes and how to control it effectively," Chaka Chaka said at the launch of her new foundation.
    "The Foundation aims to mobilise society across Africa to empower the local communities and gain their input."
    Ambassador Chaka Chaka said urgent action was needed to combat the sheer scale of death and illness caused by malaria every year but also economic loss.
     
    And the World Bank welcomed the new foundation's strong emphasis on better accountability and transparency in using funds dedicated to fighting malaria.
    With malaria claiming the lives of more than a million people ever year, the vast majority being children in Africa, and causing millions more to become sick, the Bank said it was imperative that poor countries, donors, civil society organizations, and other key groups were better able to track the flow of malaria funds, and be able to have fewer deaths and less sickness as a result of their malaria-fighting programs.
     
    "We are at a critical juncture," said World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz. "Countries are beginning to show results, distributing treated bed-nets, expanding indoor house spraying, and decreasing malaria transmission and related deaths. It is possible to fight this disease successfully, but we must monitor results closely, and the efforts must be sustained."
    Wolfowitz also emphasised accountability and transparency as important pillars in the World Bank's Booster Program for Malaria Control in Africa, which was launched in late 2005 to help African countries reduce the deaths, illness, and economic losses caused by malaria on the continent each year.
     
    So far, the Booster Program, which helps countries cover the costs for preventive measures such as spraying inside homes and insecticide-treated bed-nets, as well as medications to prevent and treat malaria, has provided US$357 million to carry out malaria projects in 11 African countries. 15 March 2007 - PANA




Latest News

  1. AFCON: 46 hurt in Zambia victory celebrations09/02Over 40 casualty cases were recorded Wednesday night at Zambia's Uni…
  2. African Peer Review Mechanism making progress08/02In 2003 the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), the co…
  3. Combating HIV infections among African women08/02With a lack of knowledge and power, African women continue to bear the br…
  4. Legume cultivation booms in Western Kenya07/02Small Holder Farmers (SHFs) who traditionally relied on seed companies fo…
  5. Malawi vendors chase out Chinese07/02Vendors in Kalonga, the Northern district of Malawi, on Wednesday petitio…
  6. Zim: Informal sector urged to join HIV battle05/02While the Harare City council is busy engaging in running battles with ci…
  7. Elections: Wole Soyinka warns Mugabe, Wade03/02The Nigerian Nobel Prize winner for literature said heads of states who a…
  8. AU elections rescheduled for June in Malawi01/02Following a deadlock during Monday's African Union elections, with a…
News archive