Africa
Africa Must Act Decisively to Defeat Cholera !

Africa Must Act Decisively to Defeat Cholera
Cholera remains Africa’s most urgent public health threat, yet it is a preventable disease. The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) reports that since the beginning of 2025, 23 countries have recorded nearly 240,000 cases and more than 5,200 deaths. Alarmingly, fatalities this year have already exceeded the total number recorded in 2024.
This is not just a health crisis — it is a crisis of inequality, infrastructure, and political will. Inadequate access to clean water and sanitation, compounded by conflict and climate change, continues to fuel outbreaks. Communities across Sudan, Chad and South Sudan, for example, are facing accelerated transmission amid displacement and fragile health systems.
But there is reason for cautious optimism. On August 26 in Lusaka, Zambia, Africa CDC and the World Health Organization launched a Continental Cholera Response Plan — a six-month initiative that seeks to eliminate the disease by 2030. Championing the plan is Zambia’s president, Hakainde Hichilema, who has mobilised commitments from African Heads of State for stronger investment, cross-border cooperation, and vaccine access.
The plan prioritises rapid, coordinated responses through a joint incident management team, backed by both technical expertise and political leadership. Crucially, it will also establish an African Continental Task Force on Cholera Control to align countries with global targets and strengthen national preparedness.
Africa has defeated public health threats before, from Ebola to COVID-19. Cholera should not continue to claim lives in the 21st century. With decisive leadership, investment in water and sanitation, and continental solidarity, Africa can move closer to a cholera-free future. The cost of inaction, measured in thousands of preventable deaths, is simply too high.
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Africa
If Ebola Is Too Dangerous for America, It Is Too Dangerous for Kenya
A growing number of Kenyans are questioning why their country should bear the risks of hosting a quarantine facility for U.S. citizens exposed to Ebola when Kenya itself has no confirmed cases of the deadly virus.
The proposed facility at Laikipia Air Base in Nanyuki has become the centre of a national debate about public health, sovereignty, and whether Kenya’s leaders are placing the interests of foreign governments ahead of the safety of their own citizens.
For residents living near the proposed site, the issue is straightforward. They believe that individuals exposed to Ebola should be quarantined and treated in their own countries.
“Everybody should be quarantined in their home country. We shouldn’t allow foreigners to bring us diseases,” said Charles Mathenge, a taxi driver who lives near the air base, interviewed by The Guardian Newspaper.
“Kenya is our country, and we should be careful with it.”
His concerns reflect a wider sentiment spreading across the country. Many Kenyans argue that while international cooperation is important, it should never come at the expense of national safety. Kenya remains free of any known Ebola cases, yet the proposal would involve admitting individuals who may have been exposed to one of the world’s most dangerous infectious diseases.
The concerns are heightened by the nature of the current outbreak. Health authorities in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo are battling a resurgence of Ebola caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain, for which there is currently no approved vaccine or treatment. The World Health Organization has declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. The virus is believed to have circulated undetected for weeks before the outbreak was officially declared.
As cases and deaths continue to rise in neighbour countries, many Kenyans are asking why their nation should voluntarily introduce an additional risk into a country that has so far remained unaffected.
At the heart of the controversy is what many view as a glaring double standard. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently stated that the United States “cannot and will not allow any cases of Ebola to enter the United States.” Yet Washington is reportedly seeking to establish a quarantine facility in Kenya for American citizens potentially exposed to the virus.
For critics, this raises an uncomfortable question: if the United States considers the risk too great for its own population, why should Kenya be expected to accept it?
The contradiction becomes even more striking when considering that during previous Ebola outbreaks, American citizens were often repatriated to the United States for treatment. More recently, an American doctor who contracted Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was transferred to Germany for care alongside his family.
This has fuelled accusations that Kenya is being treated as a convenient buffer zone rather than an equal partner.
The backlash has extended beyond local residents. Medical professionals have been among the most vocal opponents of the plan. Interviewed by The Guardian Newspaper, Dr. Davji Atellah of the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union warned that Kenya should not be turned into what he described as a “containment colony.”
His statement captured a broader concern that developing countries are too often expected to absorb risks that wealthier nations are unwilling to shoulder themselves.
“If it is too dangerous for America, it is too dangerous for Kenya,” he argued.
The controversy has also exposed deeper questions about governance and national sovereignty. Following a petition by the Katiba Institute, the High Court in Nairobi temporarily blocked the establishment of the facility and the admission of Ebola-exposed individuals into Kenya. The petitioners argued that any agreement between the Kenyan and U.S. governments must be subjected to public scrutiny and constitutional safeguards, particularly when public health and national security are involved.
The court’s intervention reflects growing concerns that decisions with potentially far-reaching consequences for millions of Kenyans cannot be made behind closed doors.
Beyond the immediate health concerns lies a larger principle. Every government has a primary responsibility to protect its citizens. International partnerships should strengthen national security, not weaken it. For many Kenyans, the Ebola quarantine proposal is not simply about a medical facility—it is about whether Kenya’s sovereignty, public safety, and national interests are being adequately defended.
The message from residents of Nanyuki and many others across the country is clear: Kenya cannot afford to gamble with the health of its people. As one resident put it, “We don’t have another country to run to.”
In a world where powerful nations increasingly prioritize their own security and public health, many Kenyans believe their government must do the same. Protecting citizens from preventable risks is not isolationism; it is a fundamental duty of the state. The debate over the proposed Ebola facility has therefore become a test of whether Kenya will place the wellbeing of its people first, or allow external interests to dictate decisions that could have lasting consequences for the nation.
Africa
AfCFTA Aims to Unite Africa’s Fragmented Markets Into a Single Trading Bloc
The African Continental Free Trade Area, known as the AfCFTA, brings together all 55 member states of the African Union into a single trading bloc, an effort to knit together one of the world’s most fragmented markets. By lowering barriers across eight regional economic communities, the agreement is intended to allow goods and services to move more freely across borders, strengthening Africa’s position in global trade.
Economists say the pact could significantly reshape commerce within the continent. Estimates suggest that eliminating import duties alone could increase intra-African trade by more than 50 percent, with even larger gains possible if governments also address non-tariff barriers such as customs delays and regulatory hurdles.
For many businesses, the current system remains paradoxical: exporting within Africa is often more expensive than trading with partners outside the continent, with average tariffs hovering around 6.1 percent. The agreement aims to reverse that dynamic by gradually reducing these costs, opening access to a larger and more integrated market.
Over the longer term, proponents argue, the AfCFTA could help drive structural transformation. Some projections suggest that, if fully implemented, it could expand Africa’s combined economic output to as much as $29 trillion by mid-century, though much will depend on how effectively member states follow through on reforms.
Africa
Republic of Congo’s Denis Sassou Nguesso, 83, Secures Fifth Term in Power
The Republic of Congo’s president, Denis Sassou Nguesso, was sworn in this week after securing a fifth consecutive term, extending a rule that now spans nearly 42 years. Provisional results announced on Tuesday by the officials put his share of the vote at 94.82% on Sunday’s poll — a margin that, while striking, had been widely anticipated.
The official turnout figure, 84.65%, raised immediate questions. State television reported high participation, yet scenes from polling stations in the capital, Brazzaville, suggested a more subdued reality, with many centres registering thin crowds or none at all. The discrepancy has reinforced longstanding doubts about the transparency of the electoral process.
![President Denis Sassou Nguesso casts his vote at a polling station in Brazzaville during the Republic of Congo’s presidential election, 15 March 2026. [Congo Presidency/Handout via Reuters]](https://aukmedia.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/DS-300x169.png)
President Denis Sassou Nguesso casts his vote at a polling station in Brazzaville during the Republic of Congo’s presidential election, 15 March 2026. [Congo Presidency/Handout via Reuters]
The election unfolded against the backdrop of an opposition boycott. Two key parties withdrew, alleging unfair conditions, while prominent figures such as General Jean-Marie Michel Mokoko and André Okombi Salissa — both imprisoned for nearly a decade — were absent from the contest. Their exclusion further narrowed an already limited field.
Restrictions in the run-up to the vote added to concerns. Internet access was cut, as has become routine during presidential elections, and movement across Brazzaville was constrained. Human rights groups reported arrests of activists, the suspension of opposition parties and tight monitoring of public gatherings, contributing to what critics describe as a climate of repression.
These dynamics reflect deeper structural patterns. Since returning to power after the 1997 civil war, Sassou Nguesso has consolidated control over state institutions. A 2015 constitutional referendum removed age and term limits, enabling him to extend his tenure and further entrench incumbency.
Yet the political continuity contrasts sharply with the country’s economic fragility. Despite significant oil and mineral wealth, the Republic of Congo remains heavily indebted. According to the World Bank, public debt stands at around 94.5% of gross domestic product, underscoring the persistent gap between resource revenues and broader development outcomes.
The scale of Sassou Nguesso’s victory, combined with the conditions under which it was secured, is likely to deepen scrutiny of both the electoral framework and the prospects for political pluralism. As the new term begins, questions around governance, economic management and eventual succession remain unresolved, even as the contours of power appear largely unchanged.
If Ebola Is Too Dangerous for America, It Is Too Dangerous for Kenya
AfCFTA Aims to Unite Africa’s Fragmented Markets Into a Single Trading Bloc
Republic of Congo’s Denis Sassou Nguesso, 83, Secures Fifth Term in Power
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