As Angola launched a nationwide measles vaccination
campaign today to immunize 7 million children within a month, the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF) urged the government to support the nascent peace
process with increased funds for health and education, and the international
community to join in helping the war-ruined country.
"We're asking the government to continue putting money
where the children are," UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said in Luanda,
the Angolan capital, at the launching of the biggest health campaign in the
country's history. "Give Angola a stable future by protecting her children. This
will be the real peace dividend."
Spearheaded by Angola's Ministry of Health and employing
33,000 workers, the campaign has received key financial, logistical and training
support from UNICEF, with technical and supply support from the UN World Health
Organization (WHO) and the UN World Food Programme in a country where one child
in 10 dies from measles compared with one in 1,000 in developed countries.
Since the signing of a peace accord last year that ended
27-years of civil war in which an estimated 5,000 schools and 60 per cent of all
hospitals were destroyed, UNICEF has consistently asked the government to
re-direct resources that were once earmarked for war towards basic social
services.
"What we're seeing today are promising first steps," Ms.
Bellamy said. "And this country has the potential to lead Africa by example. But
one million children remain out of school. The entire health system must be
strengthened and conditions established across Angola for effective delivery of
routine vaccinations. If this is done, then we will look back in five years
time, when children are in school and child mortality rates falling, and 2003
will be recognized as the year Angolan children were put first on the agenda."
Calling for international support, she noted that against
sizeable odds, Angolans were striving to strengthen the entire health and
education system, restore public services to remote areas, and fight the causes
of child mortality. "Much of this must come from within, but I trust the
international community will continue to support Angola in these goals of
reconstruction," she added. "For now is the moment when strong partnerships will
be rewarded by results."
More than 10,000 children die each year from measles in
Angola, among the 10 countries with the worst immunization coverage - well below
the average in sub-Saharan Africa - estimated in 2001 at 46 per cent. Angola has
one of the world's worst under-five mortality rates, with one in four children
dying before their fifth birthday.
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"