ECOWAS, AfDB Sign Agreement on Ebola

Fri, Oct 24, 2014
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The Economic Community of West Africa and African Development Bank have signed a $300,000 grant protocol agreement to help the coordination of Ebola Crisis Response project

THE Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS, Commission and the African Development Bank, AfDB, on Wednesday, October 22, in Abuja, signed a $300,000 Grant Protocol agreement. The money is for the coordination of Ebola Crisis Response Project in the most affected countries in the region – Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

The grant comes under the bank’s multinational crisis response technical assistance project totaling $7.65 million to support the three countries and two regional institutions – ECOWAS and the Mano River Union, MRU, – in addressing the critical gaps in medical human resource capacity, training and provision of incentives to local health workers in order to improve response to the Ebola outbreak.  The project will also focus on the mobilisation of the private sector for holistic response and maximum outcome.

Signing the accord, Kadré Desire Ouédraogo, president of the Commission, expressed the gratitude of ECOWAS institutions to the president and the management of the AfDB, and other partners for assisting the community combat the Ebola outbreak, which has claimed more than 4,500 lives mainly in the three West African countries.

Ouedraogo (r), and Dore, signing $300,000 Agreement Grant Protocol on Ebola response
Ouedraogo (r), and Dore, signing $300,000 Agreement Grant Protocol on Ebola response

While acknowledging the severity of the situation, Ouedraogo said there was great hope, given the successes recorded by two ECOWAS countries – Nigeria and Senegal – which have been declared free of Ebola by the World Health Organization, WHO. The ECOWAS chief said the grant would go a long way in complementing the multi-sectoral regional response and intervention mechanism put in place at the instance of ECOWAS leaders and being coordinated by the Commission and the West African Health Organisation, WAHO, the Community’s specialised health agency.

He called for greater solidarity, concerted action and coordination, pointing out that while intensifying efforts to defeat the disease, there was the need to eschew actions that could hinder the free movement of people, one of the pillars of the region’s integration project.

Ousmane Dore, AfDB country director, who initialed the Protocol on behalf of the bank, said the accord comes within the bank’s overall support to countries affected by the Ebola epidemic totaling $220 million. “We hope that our collective commitment will help to overcome this scourge and save the African population from the risk of being infected by the Ebola virus disease,” he said, expressing the hope that “in a few months from now the Ebola crisis will be behind us.”

Present at the signing ceremony after bilateral talks between the two institutions were other officials from the AfDB country office and headquarters, and the ECOWAS Commission, including Mariane Ngoulla, health adviser to the president of the Commission,

The Bank has also signed separate Memoranda of Understanding with the three ECOWAS Member States detailing support for their specific needs.

— Nov. 3, 2014 @ 01:00 GMT

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