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Malaria
Recent Speeches and Testimony

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Remarks by First Lady Laura Bush and
Ambassador Randall L. Tobias,
Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance and USAID Administrator

Announcement of President's Malaria Initiative Phase II Countries and New Malaria Coordinator


June 8, 2006
National Press Club
Washington, D.C.


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AMBASSADOR TOBIAS: Welcome and thank you all for attending this important event - the launch of the second phase of the President's Malaria Initiative - a life-saving effort of historic proportions to help free Africa from the death grip of malaria.

I would first like to welcome Mrs. Laura Bush for coming this morning.

I also want to thank her for her dedication to international development issues - the rights of women, literacy and the cause of education, the welfare of children, and fighting pandemic disease.

As President Bush has stated, the tragedy of malaria is compounded by the fact that the disease itself is highly treatable and preventable.

What we have lacked up till now is the leadership to summon the will and resources to defeat this disease.

Because of the President's Malaria Initiative, a truly comprehensive strategy is now in place to reduce and control this scourge, which is one of the greatest threats to human health and economic welfare on earth.

The goal is ambitious but achievable: reduce deaths from malaria by 50 percent and extend coverage of preventative measures and treatments to 85 percent of the most vulnerable groups - children under five years old and pregnant women - in targeted countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

By 2010, the US will have provided more than $1.2 billion in additional funding for malaria control and prevention initiatives in Africa.

In July of last year, I had the opportunity to accompany Mrs. Bush to Africa, in my capacity as the United States Global AIDS Coordinator.

I saw her work her magic in the wards of hospitals, in the consoling words she brought to HIV positive mothers, while she reached out to touch their AIDS infected children with a reassuring hand.

Hers was a message of hope and commitment to a stricken continent.

At the same time, I also glimpsed her steely resolve.

President Bush's tenure has been marked by unprecedented commitments to meeting some of the worst scourges of humanity, and I can vouch for the fact that there is no more gracious or effective or determined and committed advocate for these issues than the First Lady.

It is an honor and a privilege to have her here today to announce the second phase of the President's Malaria Initiative.

I am grateful for the opportunity to be part of this historic initiative, and honored to welcome to the podium the First Lady of the United States, Mrs. Laura Bush.

MRS. BUSH:Thank you, Ambassador Tobias, for your kind introduction, and for the good work that you're doing at USAID, as well as our nation's first Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance. I also want to acknowledge the President of the World Bank Group, Mr. Paul Wolfowitz, who is here with us today. Thank you very much for joining us. Congressman Chris Smith, U.S. Representative from New Jersey is here. Congressman, thank you for joining us. Congressman Smith has been an advocate for each one of these very important humanitarian efforts of the United States government. Thank you so much, Chris.

I think Ambassador Jendayi Frazier has not gotten here yet. And Dr. Hill, thank you very much. Dr. Hill is the Assistant Administrator for Global Health, Acting Malaria Coordinator. Thank you, Dr. Hill.

And I also want to recognize the children from the St. Catherine Laboure School's Cultural Heritage Choir. I can see you over there dressed in your Cultural Heritage Costumes, and I wish I could have heard you sing. But I think you performed beautifully.

Today, I'm delighted to join all of you, distinguished ambassadors, business leaders, researchers, representatives of NGOs and government officials at a hopeful moment in our fight against malaria.

One year ago, my husband called on developed countries, private foundations, and volunteer organizations to partner with African countries to dramatically reduce the suffering and death caused by this disease. To help meet that challenge, he announced the President’s Malaria Initiative -- a five year, $1.2 billion program to combat malaria in 15 of the hardest-hit nations.

Just one year into the initiative, we’ve seen a swift response, from private foundations, as well as the Corporate Alliance on Malaria in Africa, private companies that have dedicated millions of dollars to prevention and treatment. By the end of September, through early PMI partnerships with the first three focus countries, aid from the American people will have reached about six million Africans.

These initial successes are encouraging, but much work remains. Malaria kills 3,000 children in Africa every day -- and claims 1.2 million lives every year. The disease is especially devastating for those who are already vulnerable: children, pregnant women, and people infected with HIV/AIDS.

Defeating malaria is an urgent calling. Adding to the urgency is the fact that malaria is largely preventable. Now in the United States, malaria is virtually unheard of. But in the past, it was a problem here. For many years, they say, ambassadors to the United States from foreign countries received hardship pay to serve in Washington because of the heat in the summer and because of the outbreaks of malaria.

Over the decades, science and technology advanced. Malaria was eradicated in the United States. The challenge now is to make sure this progress benefits people still at risk of malaria. And using new science and technology in partnership with the first three PMI focus countries -- Angola, Tanzania, and Uganda -- PMI treatment and prevention resources are already saving lives.

In Tanzania, PMI distributed 130,000 long-lasting, insecticide-treated nets, doubling the coverage for pregnant women and young children in the Zanzibar area. In Angola -- where almost 90 percent of the population is at risk of contracting malaria -- PMI resources supported a spraying program that has protected more than 500,000 people.

In Uganda -- where almost 100,000 people a year die from malaria -- PMI is distributing more than 200,000 free bed nets and 300,000 doses of life-saving malaria drugs to children and pregnant women in refugee camps. And beginning this month, PMI resources will support a spraying program that will protect half-a-million Ugandans against mosquitoes.

Today I’m delighted to announce that the United States will partner with four more focus countries: Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, and Senegal. PMI will help provide these countries with long-lasting mosquito nets and anti-malarial drugs, and help them conduct mosquito-spraying procedures. The partnership will also include education and evaluation programs, to make sure what we're doing is effective and that it reaches the largest number of people.

Medicines, mosquito-spraying programs, and nets are vital to our campaign against malaria. Yet we’re also aware that our aid must help build African anti-malaria efforts that are sustainable. So another important part of our malaria initiative -- and other aid programs, like the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief -- is eliminating the conditions that allow these diseases to flourish.

One is the lack of doctors and nurses to meet these crises. As part of our AIDS effort, PEPFAR resources are being used to train community health workers in African cities and villages. Many more are needed, and I encourage everyone here to contribute to this effort. With every new health care worker, a long-term, sustainable health care infrastructure is being built -- one that can also curb diseases like avian flu, tuberculosis and malaria.

To end malaria, more people must be educated -- because life-saving nets, sprays and medicines work better when people know how to use them. And too few people know how malaria is transmitted. Every country has the obligation to educate its citizens, which is why every country must also improve literacy. This is especially important for women, so that they can make wise choices that will keep them, and their children, healthy and safe.

The campaign against malaria is a broad and challenging undertaking, requiring cooperation among many different countries, agencies and programs. To lead this effort, the President created the position of a Malaria Coordinator. Today, I’m privileged to introduce our first coordinator, Admiral Timothy Ziemer. Admiral Ziemer. (Applause.) With his distinguished 31-year career in the Navy, and his work as Executive Director of World Relief, Admiral Ziemer brings both efficiency and compassion to this position, and I know he’ll do a terrific job. Congratulations, Admiral.

And congratulations to all of you. Because of your dedication to defeating malaria, people throughout Africa are being kept in good health. And for the first time, millions of people in malaria-devastated countries have hope -- people like a little Ugandan boy named Komakec.

In March, USAID workers met this boy’s mother, a young woman who had already lost two sons to malaria before they reached the age of three. When her third son was born, she named him Komakec -- which in Acholi means “I am unlucky.” Little Komakec, too, eventually became infected, but unlike his brothers, he was brought to a health clinic in time to receive life-saving treatment.

When he left the clinic, he and his mother brought home a long-lasting, insecticide-treated net they received through PMI. Thanks to the net, Komakec is healthy, and his mother now knows that children in their village are lucky.

Throughout Africa, millions of mothers can now celebrate healthy children. Thank you for your commitment to them, and to defeating this epidemic. We look forward to working with you, to our future partnerships, and to ending malaria.

Thank you all very much.

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Fri, 09 Jun 2006 15:46:32 -0500
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