Other News...

Sponsored by

Bush Touts U.S. Aid to Fight Malaria

Send a link to a friend

[February 18, 2008]  ARUSHA, Tanzania (AP) -- President Bush handed out hugs and bed nets in Tanzania's rural north on Monday, saying the U.S. is part of a new international effort to provide enough mosquito netting to protect every child between one and five from contracting malaria in this east African nation.

"The disease keeps sick workers home, schoolyards quiet, communities in mourning," Bush said about the disease which kills 100,000 people a year in Tanzania alone. "The suffering caused by malaria is needless and every death caused by malaria is unacceptable."

"It is unacceptable to people here in Africa, who see their families devastated and economies crippled. It is unacceptable to people in the United States, who believe every human life has value."

Bush's visit to Meru District Hospital is part of his six-day trek through five African nations. The public mission of his travels is to improve health on an impoverished continent. The underlying one is to preserve his initiatives beyond his presidency and cement humanitarianism as a key part of his legacy.

The president launched a plan in 2005 to dramatically reduce malaria deaths in sub-Saharan Africa, the worst affected region in the world. More than 80 percent of malaria cases happen here; the disease kills at least 1 million infants and children under five every year. Congress so far has put $425 million toward Bush's $1.2 billion, five-year program, which has helped more than 25 million people.

"The power to save lives comes with the moral obligation to use it," Bush said about the U.S. commitment.

In the northern highlands of Arusha, an area known as a cradle of African safari adventure, Bush announced that the U.S. and Tanzania -- in partnership with the World Bank and The Global Fund -- plan to distribute 5.2 million free bed nets in Tanzania in six months. That's enough, he said, to provide a net for every child between ages one and five in Tanzania. The Global Fund is a public-private partnership that has committed millions to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in 136 countries.

Bush landed here, in sight of the majestic Mount Kilimanjaro, and was greeted by Maasai women dancers who wore purple robes and white discs around their necks. The president joined their line and enjoyed himself, but held off on dancing.

[to top of second column]

As Bush's motorcade made the long drive from the airport to the hospital, it passed through several villages where thousands of locals lined the road. At one point, flowers had been strewn in the street before the car of the president, who is popular here for the help his administration is providing to battle disease.

In every part of the hospital he toured, women spontaneously hugged the president. He visited with pregnant women receiving vouchers for bed nets and children waiting to be diagnosed and treated for malaria. After his remarks, the president and his wife, first lady Laura Bush, distributed several U.S.-funded bed nets treated with insecticide to women waiting quietly on benches.

Bush reinforced the good his malaria program is doing with a visit to a huge bed net factory that provides jobs to locals. He visited with workers on the huge, kelly-green warehouse floor, where machines turn insecticide-soaked pellets into yarn and weave them into nets that are inspected and folded. Bales of completed nets with tags saying `'USAID, From the American People, President's Malaria Initiative" were prominently displayed along walkways. But the vast majority of the bales ready for transport had UNICEF labels.

While Bush visited the hospital and textile factory, he dispatched Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Kenya to try to help push forward deadlocked peace talks. A disputed presidential election there led to a wave of violence just ahead of Bush's trip.

The U.S. drive to spend money on the health of Africans, including a much larger effort on HIV/AIDS, is appreciated here. In a recent Pew Research Center report, African countries held more favorable views of the U.S. than any others in the world. And Bush, the face of the U.S. superpower, is showered with praise wherever he goes. It seems a world away from the sentiment at home, where his public approval is at 30 percent.

[Associated Press; By JENNIFER LOVEN and BEN FELLER]

Associated Press writer Ben Feller reported from Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law & Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health & Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor