UK to work with African Union to slow spread of coronavirus in
Africa
- £20 million to help African response to coronavirus
- Support to help train African health experts to tackle
pandemic in Africa
The UK will invest up to £20 million in the African Union’s new
‘African Union Covid19 Response Fund’ to tackle coronavirus and
save lives.
This makes the UK the largest national donor to the fund, which
was announced by Cyril Ramaphosa, Chairperson of the African
Union (AU) and President of the Republic of South Africa last
month. It will support African leaders and technical experts to
slow the spread of coronavirus and save lives in Africa and
worldwide.
The fund will tackle the pandemic by recruiting African health
experts and deploying them where they are needed most,
strengthening global tracking of the pandemic, combatting
potentially harmful misinformation, providing specialist
coronavirus training for health workers and making information
about the virus more accessible to the public.
Announcing the funding today, International Development Secretary
said:
“As the UK faces its biggest peacetime challenge in tackling
coronavirus, it’s never been more important to work with our
partners in Africa to fight disease.
“No one is safe until we are all safe and this new funding and
support for African leadership will help protect us all – in the
UK, Africa and around the world – from further spread of the
virus.”
The announcement follows calls between Minister for Africa
, AU Commissioner for Trade
and Industry Albert Muchanga and AU Commissioner for Social
Affairs Amira El-Fadil in which they discussed the risks Africa
faces from the pandemic and how the UK is working with partners
on the continent to tackle these shared global issues.
This new support for the African Union comes after the UK has
already pledged over $900 million to the international fight
against coronavirus. The UK is also using its existing aid
programmes to help vulnerable countries in Africa to strengthen
their health systems. It also comes ahead of the UK hosting the
virtual Global Vaccine Summit on 4th June, to secure future
funding for Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which has already saved
the lives of millions of children in Africa from infectious
diseases
Many countries on the continent are beginning to see exponential
increases in coronavirus case numbers, presenting a severe risk
to fragile healthcare systems. The high prevalence of HIV,
malnutrition and other illnesses in parts of Africa may also
worsen the impact of the virus. In sub-Saharan Africa, there are
on average just 2 doctors for every 10,000 people, compared to 28
per 10,000 in the UK.
If healthcare systems become overwhelmed, the worldwide spread of
the virus will be difficult to slow, risking new waves of
infection. The UK’s contribution to the Covid19 Response Fund
will prevent this by working in partnership with the AU to help
fight the virus, strengthen healthcare systems and save lives in
the AU’s 55 member states.
Today’s announcement brings the total UK aid contribution to
fighting coronavirus to up to £764 million ($935.6 million). This
money is helping to find a vaccine, providing vital humanitarian
relief, feeding the world’s poorest people, strengthening global
healthcare systems and managing the risk of a global economic
downturn.
Notes to editors
- The contribution to the AU African Union Covid19 Response
Fund will support the implementation of the AU’s continental
strategy to: (1) coordinate the efforts of AU member states and
multilateral and international partners in responding to the
outbreak in Africa; and (2) promote an evidence-based approach
for surveillance, diagnosis, treatment and control of coronavirus
in Africa.
- Aspects of the strategy supported by the fund will include:
the recruitment and deployment of African experts, through Africa
CDC’s African Voluntary Health Corps (a roster of 800 skilled
volunteers), tracking the outbreak through effective screening,
contact tracing and information management; combatting
misinformation; creating an online community of practice with
weekly webinars for African clinicians; publishing technical
guidelines in all AU languages; creating an Africa Taskforce for
coronavirus to co-ordinate response activity, and convening AU
member states to agree a continental response.
- The UN Economic Commission for Africa has warned that over
300,000 Africans could lose their lives due to coronavirus.