A three-day anti-malaria training program opened in
Kampala on Monday as part of China's efforts to join force with
Uganda to fight malaria.
"Malaria has serious implications on all aspects of
our lives, at individual, family, community level and at national
level. We can not afford to keep silent and live with it," said
Stephen Malinga, Uganda's minister of health, who opened the
training program in Kampala on Monday.
He also hailed the Chinese government for financing
the course, saying it is an indication of the growing cordial
relation between the two countries.
"There are a lot of technologies in China, in
medicine, which the world is freshly discovering. It is the
challenge for participants in this short course to utilize this
opportunity to learn from Chinese experts," Malinga
said.
Ministry of Health statistics indicate that malaria
kills over 80,000 Ugandans per year, mostly pregnant women and
children, and still ranks as the number one killer in the east
African country.
He Shijing, the charged' affairs of the Chinese
embassy in Kampala, said the Chinese government is fulfilling its
pledge of donating anti-malaria medicine and carrying out
anti-malaria training programs in Uganda.
"The Chinese experts are here, ready and willing to
work hard together with their Ugandan colleagues to reduce the
influence of malaria, to share experience and to improve Ugandan
people's health through direct contribution of anti-malaria
medicine and treatment expertise," he added.
In recent months, various Chinese anti-malaria drugs
have been introduced on the Ugandan market as the Ugandan
government embarked on various measures, including the indoor
spraying of the DDT, to combat the disease spread by female
anopheles mosquitoes.
(Xinhua News Agency November 28, 2006)
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