Europe must push for a healthy Africa

Published: 15 July 2010 y., Thursday

Artėjančio Pasaulio futbolo čempionato įkvėpti... (Pietų Afrika)
The World Cup is over and life in Africa is returning to normal, but it is anything but “fair play” with life expectancy for some 30 to 40 years less than for Europeans. There are many reasons, from bad governance, the financial crisis and climate change to natural disasters, extreme poverty, wars and greed. Nevertheless and despite Europe's focus on the financial crisis, MEPs insist that aid is essential.

“It's not a question of ideology but of saving human lives,” Belgian Socialist Veronique De Keyser said during a discussion of her report on health care systems in Sub-Saharan Africa in the Development Committee on 13 July.

The financial crisis “does not encourage European countries to keep their promises...to give at least 0.7% of GDP in development assistance by 2010,” the report says.

Health not a priority

In addition, traditionally health is not a priority and gets half the amount given to education. Targeting remains a problem as funding for specific diseases including AIDS, TB and malaria mean money is diverted away from basic healthcare.

Ms De Keyser, who nursed in Africa, said that often hospitals are too far away from the people who need them. Health workers often lack experience. Slovak EPP member Anna Záborská said the EU should support training programs, while Luxembourg Liberal Charles Goerens suggested temporary visas for African health workers would allow them to gain experience. He also underlined the problem of doctors leaving to get better pay.

Failing on Millennium Development Goals

Parliament criticised the failure to meet the Millennium Development Goals on health and particularly on cutting maternal mortality during the June Plenary. The report by British Socialist Michael Cashman said the EU is €20 million short on its spending commitments.

The aim is to establish sustainable health care systems, providing access to treatment and medicine for everybody.

British Conservative Nirj Deva said that in his country of origin, Sri Lanka, mortality rates shot up to Western standards after the establishment of free health care and preventive measures. Between 1948 and 2010 life expectancy rose 30 years, he said.


 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Berlusconi survives confidence vote

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi wins a no-confidence motion in parliament by a margin of only three votes. more »

Snow storm pounds US Midwest

A powerful snow storm is playing havoc with travel plans in the US Midwest as more than 2,000 flights are canceled in Chicago. more »

Third EU-Africa summit: MEPs call for an EU law on "blood minerals"

The European Parliament backed plans to create an EU law ensuring traceability of imported minerals, as a tool to combat illegal exploitation of conflict minerals in African countries, in a resolution passed on Wednesday. more »

Commissioner Georgieva makes a plea for cholera victims in Haiti

Commissioner Georgieva said “The anti–cholera efforts undertaken before of the post–electoral riots have reduced the daily rate of cholera deaths from 50 on 23th of November to 22 on 4th of December." more »

Passengers return from Artic cruise

Passengers onboard a damaged cruise ship return to safety in Argentina. more »

Civil society needs to play a greater role in EU–Russia relations, says the EESC

In the immediate wake of the successful EU–Russia Summit, the European Economic and Social Committee is discussing its own–initiative opinion on EU‑Russia relations in the presence of Vladimir Chizhov, Russian Ambassador to the EU. more »

UK students protest tuition hike

Students demonstrate on the streets of London, in protest over a that would allow tuition fees to treble. more »

Bomb attack on Lenin statue

A bomb destroys part of a Lenin statue near Saint Petersburg, the latest such attack on a monument to the founder of the Soviet Union. more »

Pollution warning over Ganges

Residents living along the historic Ganges River in eastern India complain water pollution is on the rise. more »

Two held over Israel fire

Israeli police arrest two people on suspicion of starting a huge forest fire through negligence. more »