Off the wire
Asian environment protects children from developing allergies: Australian expert  • Roundup: Australia violates human rights of former Guantanamo Bay prisoner: UN  • Heightened Asian volatility sees ANZ bank flag higher credit charge  • Australia should embrace being a "cashless society": finance official  • Australia's 1st half economic growth forecast below trend: Westpac  • Overseas Cambodian workers send home over 1 bln USD per year  • S. Korea adds 339,000 jobs in January with jobless rate at 3.7 pct  • India slaps 2.1 bln USD tax notice on telecom giant Vodafone  • Apple ordered to help FBI access terror killer's phone  • Spotlight: Chinese diplomat strongly dissatisfied with UN human rights chief's "misleading remarks"  
You are here:   Home

EU to grant 10 million euros to fight Zika virus

Xinhua, February 17, 2016 Adjust font size:

The European Union (EU) will grant 10 million euros (about 10.7 million U.S. dollars) to finance research about the Zika virus, the bloc's Ambassador to Brazil Joao Gomes Cravinho said on Tuesday.

He made the announcement after a meeting with Brazilian Health Minister Marcelo Castro and 24 ambassadors of EU countries.

"We left this meeting more prepared to correctly inform people about the reality of the Zika virus," said Cravinho.

Latin America has been witnessing an outbreak of Zika. Cases of Europeans who presented symptoms of the virus after a trip to the region have been reported.

The disease became a great source of concern after the discovery of its relation with microcephaly and Guillain-Barre Syndrome.

Over 400 cases of microcephaly in newborns were confirmed in Brazil, though not all of them were confirmed to have been caused by an infection of Zika during gestation.

Brazilian scientists also announced that microcephaly is not the only condition which can result from the Zika virus: they analyzed brain tissue of stillborn babies whose mothers had been infected with Zika and found traces of the virus. Not all of them had microcephaly -- at least one had a different malformation which is believed to have been caused by the virus. In addition, many of the babies with microcephaly born from mothers who had Zika in Brazil also presented eye lesions. Endi