For the first time, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention (Africa CDC) in collaboration with the Operations Division of the
African Union (AU) Peace and Security Department (PSD) successfully deployed 28
frontline responders from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to Burkina
Faso, Cameroon, Mali and Niger through activation of the African Union
Strategic Lift Capability.
According to a press release by Mrs.
Wynne Musabayana,
African Union Commission (AUC) Directorate of Information and Communication, this
operation aligns with Article 6 of the Protocol relating to the establishment
of the Peace and Security Council (PSC), which provides, as one of the core
functions of Council, humanitarian action and disaster management. On 9 March
2020, the PSC issued the communique number 915 on the situation of the Novel
Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) pandemic and called on African Union Member
States to support and allow Africa CDC to continue with its activities in
responding to COVID-19 on the continent.
The release recalled that on 22 February 2020, an emergency
meeting of African Ministers of Health was held in Addis Ababa, which led to
the endorsement of the Joint Africa Continental Strategy for COVID-19 and
establishment of the Africa Taskforce for Novel Coronavirus (AFTCOR).
“The joint strategy is based on the need to coordinate,
communicate, collaborate and communicate among Member States in their preparedness
and eventual response to COVID-19, including cross-border detection and
control. The ministers called on the African Union Commission, donors and
partners to support coordination by African countries in their efforts to
prepare for and respond to COVID-19.”
“The African Standby Force, therefore, activated the African
Union Strategic Lift Capability as part of efforts to support implementation of
the Joint Africa Continental Strategy for COVID-19. The PSD communicated with
several Member States to provide military aircraft to support the operation.
Several member states showed interest and the Government of Cameroon was chosen
to support this first mission within the framework of the African Standby
Force.”
“We appreciate the remarkable collaboration of the Government of
DRC and Cameroon in facilitating this mission in close cooperation and
collaboration with several African countries that provided exceptional
approval, opened their airspaces, and created a humanitarian corridor to allow
the aircraft to pass through.”
“This is a historic mission as it was operated on 25 May 2020,
the birth date of the Organization for African Unity (African Union), now
called the Africa Day. This complex mission shows the African solidarity,
builds upon existing capacities on the continent, and shows how Africans
cooperate to support each other in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.”
It would be recalled that since February 2020, Africa CDC has
been deploying experts to support response to the COVID-19 at its headquarters
and in some Member States. Africa CDC and PSD will continue to coordinate,
cooperate and collaborate to support efforts to respond to COVID-19 on the
continent.
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