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Saturday, 15 December, 2001, 10:11 GMT
Donors pledge to end river blindness
River blindness affected eye
Up to a third of the victims lose their sight
African governments, international organisations and business groups have pledged $39m to fund efforts to eliminate river blindness in 19 African countries by 2010.

The announcement came after a five-day meeting hosted by the World Bank and the US Agency for International Development in Washington.

The new Africa Program for Onchocerciasis Control (Apoc) builds on an existing initiative in west Africa, which consists in controlling the black fly that spreads the disease and distributing the antidote ivermectin.

Apoc comprises countries in central, eastern and southern Africa, where nearly 100 million people are at risk of contracting the disease.

The World Bank says 22 million people in this region are heavily infected.

Millions saved

River blindness is caused by a parasitic worm that develops in the human body, causing constant itchiness and eventually blindness.

Apoc countries
Angola
Burundi
Cameroon
Central African Republic
Chad
DR Congo
Republic of Congo
Equatorial Guinea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Kenya
Liberia
Malawi
Mozambique
Nigeria
Rwanda
Sudan
Tanzania
Uganda

Up to a third of those who contract the disease lose their sight.

The disease primarily affects African rural communities, which represent about 80% of Africa's population.

The west African programme, based in Burkina Faso, has been funded by donor contributions of $560m over a period of 27 years.

According to World Bank figures, it has protected 18 million children from ever contracting the disease, and freed 25 million hectares of arable land for resettlement and cultivation.

For the new initiative for eastern, central and southern Africa, the drug company Merck has pledged to donate the antidote commercially known as Mectizan in whatever quantity is needed, for as long as necessary.

The World Bank estimates that the new funds, which will be complemented over coming years to reach a total of $80m, will allow up to 60 million people to be treated annually by 2010.

See also:

07 Jun 00 | Health
River blindness 'breakthrough'
07 Sep 00 | Festival of science
African island in disease campaign
11 Nov 99 | Africa
Blind leading the blind
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