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Africa: Optimism, As Women Farmers Showcase Positive Impact of Livelihood Projects in South Sudan

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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Shortly after Natalina Atim started farming in South Sudan’s Eastern Equatoria state, she lost a third of her harvest from the one-hectare maize field she had planted. The field was in flowering stage when her farm was invaded by desert locusts in 2021, the year South Sudan experienced its most severe plague of locusts in modern history.
The swarming of locusts, with their legendary effects on crops, resulted in the widespread ruin of farms belonging to local communities such as Atim’s in Magwi County. The destruction of food crops and grazing land throughout the country greatly affected the livelihoods and food security status of many hundreds of vulnerable people, the majority of whom were women.
Despite the devastation she had witnessed, Atim, 48, a single mother and a grandmother, did not give up subsistence farming as she struggled to feed her family of nine. “When the locusts invaded our farm, we lost almost everything as we had not yet harvested, along with [losing] those crops we had just planted and were beginning to sprout, including maize and sorghum,” she recounted.
“This hit us so hard because we had just returned from the refugee camp in Uganda a few months before and were barely getting by as we tried to resettle.”
Since then, Atim and her Lacas Pelony farming group have received training in pest surveillance and good agronomy practices. They have also received seeds for maize, cassava, and cowpeas to help them embark on their journey to economic recovery. Atim put the training skills and seeds to use, cultivating six hectares on which she planted maize and cassava for three seasons. “From the three acres section of the farm, where I planted cassava, I have harvested 7 tonnes,” she said. “And I have harvested 2.2 tonnes of maize from the other three acres.”
These have greatly helped my household to combat hunger and earned income for rebuilding our home, paying for my grandchildren in school, and starting a small business. Natalina Atim
Seed money
To help South Sudan recover from the locust outbreak, the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) has provided a total of $143 million in financing for two projects, the Resilient Agricultural Livelihoods Project (RALP) and Emergency Locust Response Project (ELRP). The projects have been implemented by the Government of South Sudan through the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, in partnership with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
Together, they seek to address challenges encountered by vulnerable groups, including women farmers and youth, by supplying productive assets and offering training in agriculture and other economic activities that sit in close proximity to communities, households, and individuals.
Both projects emphasize the involvement of women. They have helped women raise 403,000 seedlings and led to the repair of access roads and other community infrastructure, including four pesticide stores, one central laboratory, eight farmers’ multipurpose centres and eight stores in selected areas in South Sudan.
Amer Bech Anyuat is chairperson of the RALP-supported Matjot Multipurpose Cooperative for Seed Production for Market in Makuach Payam, Bor County, Jonglei State. The 30-member group has 17 women. They received leadership training, training in basic agricultural skills, farming tools and seeds. The area of land Anyuat has under cultivation has since changed from 25 to 35 feddans, with a dramatic increase in her yields of sorghum from 250 bags to 300 bags.
The women’s group farmers who joined RALP also received other income-generating opportunities from the Village Savings and Loans Association initiative to help them rebuild their livelihoods, provide food for their families, and boost their household income. “The agriculture people came to us here, they taught us, they gave us seeds, and now we are okay. Now you can see I am harvesting sorghum in my garden,” said Debora Peter, another farmer.
“As a group of women farmers, we have three hectares of sorghum that is now being harvested for food, and I will sell some to earn money for meeting the basic needs of my family. I can now say that life is slowly improving for my household. I urge our funders to continue with the support to reach more households, so that they too can witness the transformation I have experienced.”
The RALP project also addressed nutritional gaps by supporting groups of women vegetable farmers. For years, most households in Torit County’s Iluhum residential area had purchased vegetables for home consumption, a habit that deprived them of the nutritional diversity of the many types of vegetables not available in local markets, due both to their limited supply and to prices unaffordable for many families.
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The Muhaba women farmers’ group in Torit County is being supported to cultivate a variety of vegetables for individual household consumption and sales.
Mama Tina joined the Muhaba crop and vegetable production group in 2022 and learned about kitchen gardening. This has enabled her to plant vegetables around her compound with seeds for amaranths, cowpeas, and jute melon that she received from the project. It also supplied her with tools, such as hoes, shovels, and watering cans.
“It was very difficult for us to find vegetables in the markets because there were only a few sellers, and a few varieties, like sukuma wiki and jute melons, were sold very expensively. Many families avoided the markets due to the high prices and instead opted for wild vegetables,” she said. “Our children were malnourished and pregnant women were at risk of sicknesses.”
“With the farming skills, seeds, and the nutritional awareness we received, now we produce all our vegetables and sell excess to the market. Our families’ nutritional statuses have improved, children are healthy, and we don’t go to the hospital as frequently as we used to.”
Read the original article on World Bank.
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Africa: New Leadership Appointed to the Africa Platform On Children Affected By Armed Conflicts (AP-Caac)

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Addis Ababa — The Africa Platform on Children Affected by Armed Conflicts (AP-CAAC) is pleased to announce that H.E. Ambassador Rebecca Amuge Otengo, Ambassador of the Republic of Uganda to Ethiopia and Permanent Representative to the African Union (AU), has accepted to serve as Co-Chair of the Platform. She will serve alongside the African Union Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, H.E. Ambassador Bankole Adeoye, as Co-Chairs of AP-CAAC.
Joining the leadership of the Platform, H.E. Ambassador Nts’iuoa Sekete, Ambassador of the Kingdom of Lesotho to Ethiopia and Permanent Representative to the AU, has also accepted to serve as Vice Chair.
The AP-CAAC, inaugurated on 23 September 2021, is a continental initiative dedicated to advocating for and protecting the rights and welfare of children affected by armed conflicts across Africa. With their extensive diplomatic experience and steadfast commitment to peace, security, and human rights, Ambassadors Otengo and Sekete bring renewed vision and leadership to the Platform at a critical time.
As Co-Chairs, H.E. Ambassador Otengo and H.E. Commissioner Adeoye will guide the strategic direction of the Platform, championing initiatives that place children at the heart of Africa’s governance, peace and security agenda. H.E. Ambassador Sekete, as Vice Chair, will support coordination and collaboration among Member States and institutions to drive forward AP-CAAC’s mission.
With this new leadership, enhanced advocacy and tangible progress in protecting children in situations of conflict across Africa will remain a key priority.
Read the original article on African Union.
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Africa: Six Public Health Champions Celebrated At the Seventy-Eighth World Health Assembly

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At an award ceremony taking place during a Plenary of the Seventy-eighth World Health Assembly in Geneva on Friday, 23 May 2025, public health prizes and awards were presented to persons and institutions from around the world for their outstanding contributions to public health.
The six 2025 laureates received their awards from the Seventy-eighth World Health Assembly President Teodoro J. Herbosa, together with high-level representatives of the foundations that established these public health awards and prizes, and WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
In February 2025, the Executive Board of the World Health Organization decided to distinguish six laureates to celebrate their unique role for public health in their countries, their regions and globally.
They come from four WHO Regions: Africa, Eastern Mediterranean, Europe and Western Pacific.
Sasakawa Health Prize
Dr Merete Nordentoft from Denmark is the 2025 winner of the Sasakawa Health Prize
The Sasakawa Health Prize is awarded for outstanding innovative work in health development to a person or persons, an institution or institutions, or a nongovernmental organization or organizations. Such work includes the promotion of given health programmes or notable advances in primary health care.
The Executive Board awarded the Sasakawa Health Prize for 2025 to Dr Merete Nordentoft from Denmark for her outstanding innovative work in health development.
Dr Merete Nordentoft has made important contributions to mental health care by providing concrete, primary health-care-based solutions to address gaps in the chain of care. In 1998, she created the OPUS outreach treatment programme that has resulted in significantly improved outcomes for young people with first-episode psychosis, demonstrating substantial achievements in advancing mental health programmes and improving the quality of care. One of OPUS’s key success factors is the direct involvement of communities and family members. The concept has since served as inspiration for many countries throughout the world. Her intervention research on suicide prevention has directly informed Denmark’s national action plan for suicide prevention, which includes regional suicide preventive clinics and collaboration between helplines run by nongovernmental organizations and professional helplines.
The focus on early intervention and increasing the accessibility of mental health services at the community level benefits vulnerable groups.
“With the right support, early enough, recovery is not only possible – it is likely,” said Dr Merete Nordentoft.
United Arab Emirates Health Foundation Prize
Dr Jožica Maučec Zakotnik from Slovenia won the 2025 United Arab Emirates Health Foundation Prize
The United Arab Emirates Health Foundation Prize is awarded for an outstanding contribution to health development to a person or persons, an institution or institutions, or a nongovernmental organization or organizations.
The Executive Board awarded the 2025 Prize to Dr Jožica Maučec Zakotnik from Slovenia for her outstanding contribution to health development.
Dr Jožica Maučec Zakotnik has made exceptional contributions to the promotion of healthy lifestyles and to ensuring equal access to preventive services in health care for all. She co-developed an innovative model of multidisciplinary, free-of-charge health promotion centres that include access to mental health services, breaking access barriers for the most vulnerable through collaboration with social services and schools.
She also led the establishment in 2005 of the MURA Health and Development Centre, meant to address social determinants of health in an impoverished region, that became a WHO collaborating centre in 2009 for cross-sectoral approaches to health and development. At the National Public Health Institute, Dr Zakotnik collaborated with firefighting associations to increase awareness of colorectal cancer screening amongst men. As a State Secretary (2001–2004 and 2017–2018), she helped to scale up successful pilot programmes at the national level, including for the first national programme on nutrition, the strategy for promotion of health-enhancing physical activity and the MURA mental health programme.
“Together we can make a lasting difference in the lives of countless individuals – at home and beyond,” said Dr JoΕΎica Maučec Zakotnik.
Highness Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah Prize for Research in Health Care for the Elderly and in Health Promotion
Professor Huali Wang (China) and the Geriatric Healthcare Directorate of the Ministry of Health (State of Kuwait) are the 2025 winners of the Highness Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah Prize for Research in Health Care for the Elderly and in Health Promotion
His Highness Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah Prize for the Promotion of Healthy Ageing is awarded to a person or persons, an institution or institutions, or a nongovernmental organization or organizations who have made an outstanding contribution to research, health promotion, policy and/or programmes on healthy ageing.
The Executive Board awarded the 2025 Prize jointly to Professor Huali Wang (China) and the Geriatric Healthcare Directorate of the Ministry of Health (State of Kuwait) for their outstanding contributions to healthy ageing.
Professor Huali Wang has made significant contributions to healthy ageing at the national and global levels. She helped shape China’s national healthy ageing strategic plan and national dementia action plan, developing a comprehensive approach for mental care. The approach, now active across 27 regions, has resulted in dementia screenings for over 100 000 older adults, as well as health education campaigns and interdisciplinary, community-based service models that integrate professional and family support. Professor Wang also pioneered the development of dementia caregiver support groups, establishing in 2000 China’s first Memory Café, which promotes community involvement and has since become a national model. Professor Wang has championed cognitive stimulation therapy training and implementation in over 20 provinces. Professor Wang has collaborated with WHO on global dementia guidelines and on the iSupport online course, helping to extend caregiver support worldwide. The social prescribing pilot programme that Professor Wang initiated in Shangrao has received global recognition.
“This award is not just a recognition of our past work but a call to action for future endeavours – together, we can make a difference in the lives of many,” said Professor Huali Wang.
The Geriatric Healthcare Directorate at the Ministry of Health, Kuwait, has designed a multifaceted and comprehensive approach to healthy ageing. It developed a National Health Strategy for Older Adults (2024–2030) that provides a clear framework for the provision of accessible, high-quality integrated care and the promotion of active and healthy ageing. The implementation of the Kuwait Older Adults Health Survey has helped to inform policies and improve service delivery. Innovative mobile vaccination campaigns have benefited an additional 1000 older adults and caregivers. Comprehensive training programmes on healthy ageing, benefiting over 1000 caregivers, physicians, pharmacists and nurses are reported to have improved health-care delivery and coverage for older adults by 40%. The Directorate carries out community engagement initiatives to create inclusive and accessible environments that are responsive to the needs of older people and it also collaborates with nongovernmental organizations to foster community support.
“This recognition is not only a reflection of our efforts, but a renewed responsibility to continue striving for excellence in elderly care, preserving dignity and honouring their lifelong contributions,” said Dr Fatemah Bendhafari from the UAE Geriatric Healthcare Services Directorate of Kuwait’s Ministry of Health.
Dr LEE Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health
Professor Helen Rees from South Africa is the 2025 winner of the Dr LEE Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health
The Dr LEE Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health is awarded to a person or persons, an institution or institutions, a governmental or nongovernmental organization or organizations, who have made an outstanding contribution to public health.
The WHO Executive Board awarded the 2025 Prize to Professor Helen Rees (South Africa) for her outstanding contribution to public health at the local, national, regional and global levels.
Professor Helen Rees founded the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute (Wits RHI) in 1994, which has treated over 650 000 people living with HIV and which operates in 52 sites across South Africa with regional partnerships in 23 countries. In 2004, she created the Hillbrow Health Precinct, an innovative model that integrates urban regeneration, medical research and community-based health services, such as care for adolescents living with HIV and vaccination services, and that provides essential health services to some of Johannesburg’s most marginalized residents. Professor Rees has also made major research contributions covering HIV prevention, vaccines against human papillomavirus and COVID-19 and her research on HIV prevention, including pre-exposure prophylaxis and long-acting injectable treatments, has transformed HIV-prevention strategies for vulnerable populations.
“Public health and human rights are intertwined, driven by the social determinants of health and the access people have to care – let us continue the struggle for health for all,” said Professor Helen Rees.
Nelson Mandela Award for Health Promotion
Dr Majed Zemni from Tunisia is the winner of the 2025 Nelson Mandela Award for Health Promotion
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The Nelson Mandela Award for Health Promotion is awarded to a person or persons, an institution or institutions, a governmental or nongovernmental organization or organizations, who or which has/have made a significant contribution to health promotion.
The Executive Board awarded the 2025 Award to Dr Majed Zemni (Tunisia) for his outstanding contribution to health promotion.
Dr Majed Zemni has made extensive and impactful contributions to health promotion, particularly in his roles as President of the Tunisian Association of Forensic Medicine and Criminal Sciences and as President of the National Office of Family and Population (ONFP) of Tunisia. He helped issue key legal instruments, such as guidelines for forensic medicine and legislation relating to patients’ rights and medical liability. As part of the National Committee of Medical Ethics, he contributed to the development of protocols for managing the deceased that ensured human dignity during the COVID-19 pandemic. He worked at the Psychological Assistance Centre for Women and Children Victims of Violence. He also maintained the ONFP’s International Training and Research Centre as a WHO collaborating centre. His efforts have helped reorient health services with a patient-centred approach, with particular attention to people living with HIV and persons deprived of their liberty, and through multisectoral engagement involving other ministries and stakeholders in the development and implementation of programmes.
“Health is a common denominator for all humanity, regardless of borders, races or policies,” said Dr Majed Zemni. “We must all strive to establish health security and a healthier future for all.”
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The call for nominations of candidates for each prize is sent out each year after closure of the World Health Assembly. Nominations can be made by national health administrations of a WHO Member State and by any former recipient of the prizes. At its 156th session in February 2025, the Executive Board designated the 2025 winners of the prizes, based on proposals made by a selection panels composed of Executive Board Members, and working independently for each prize.
See more on public health prizes and awards web page.
Read detailed information about the public health prizes and awards process.
Full information can be found in this 78th World Health Assembly document (A78/INF./1).
Six African Nations Commit to Eliminate Deadly Neglected Disease Visceral Leishmaniasis
Global Leaders Reaffirm Commitment to WHO With At Least U.S.$ 170 Million Raised At World Health Assembly 2025 Pledging Event
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Africa: All of Africa Today – May 23, 2025

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 More Flee Escalating Violence At South Sudan-Ethiopia Border
The aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) calls on the warring parties in South Sudan to create a safe humanitarian space to protect civilians and aid workers, as fighting escalates on the country’s border with Ethiopia. Thousands of South Sudanese refugees in the area have been forced to flee further into Ethiopia.This comes as military officials from Ethiopia and South Sudan agreed to enhance joint operations targeting what they described as “illegal elements” active along their shared border. Ethiopia’s Gambella region is experiencing a “dual emergency”, as more people are becoming infected and affected by an expanding cholera outbreak, the MSF statement said.
Endorsement Of New Sudan PM By AU Chairperson Sparks Uproar
A statement endorsing the appointment of Prime Minister Kamil Idris by the AU Commission Chairperson, Mahamoud Ali Youssouf, has triggered a firestorm of criticism, with some Sudanese stakeholders accusing Youssouf of bias. The head of Sudanese Armed Forces – and the country’s interim leader – General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan earlier named Idris, a former UN official, as the country’s new Prime Minister. He is a seasoned diplomat, having served the UNs’ World Intellectual Property Organization. Idris is no stranger to Sudanese politics. In 2010, he stood against the country’s former long-time ruler Omar al-Bashir in the presidential election. His appointment comes as the country continues to reel from a civil war that erupted in April 2023 between Burhan’s armed forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, led by his former deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
UK-Mauritius Chagos Deal Gets Green Light After Court Ruling
The UK-Mauritius deal to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands was revived after a British court lifted a last-minute injunction that had blocked the agreement. The High Court initially blocked the signing following a legal challenge from two British-Chagossian women representing the islands’ displaced residents. But after a rapid follow-up hearing, Judge Martin Chamberlain ruled the injunction should be removed and “no further interim relief” granted, effectively allowing the handover to proceed. The UK is set to transfer sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean, which was separated from Mauritius in 1965. The landmark deal will see the UK retain control of the strategically important Diego Garcia military base under a 99-year lease agreement with the United States.
DR Congo Senate Strips Kabila of Immunity
The Democratic Republic of Congo’s Senate overwhelmingly voted to strip former president Joseph Kabila of his honorific immunity following accusations that he supported the Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group, which had seized territory in the country’s mineral-rich east. 88 senators voted in favour of lifting Kabila’s immunity, with five opposing and three abstaining. President Felix Tshisekedi accused Kabila, who had been abroad since 2023, of conspiring with M23 to destabilize the country. Kabila, who has been outside the country since 2023, was not present in the chamber at the time of the vote.
‘Sex for Fish’ Exploitation Plagues Malawi’s Women Fishers
Women in fishing communities in Malawi’s lakeshore districts of Nkhotakota and Mangochi are frequently targets of sexual exploitation for fish, a practice commonly known as ‘sex for fish.’ Women are being coerced into transactional sex by male boat owners in order to access fish, according to a report recently released by the Malawi Human Rights Commission (MHRC). A MHRC inquiry into fishing hubs along Lake Malawi found that systemic abuse was deeply entrenched, with minimal intervention from authorities. The report found out that lack of targeted policies and enforcement mechanisms within fishing communities has created an environment where women are vulnerable to sexual exploitation and left without recourse when faced with unwanted pregnancies or abuse.
Uganda’s Parliament Passes Bill Allowing Military Trials for Civilians
Uganda’s parliament passed the 2025 Uganda Peoples’ Defence Forces (Amendment) Bill, allowing military courts to try civilians for crimes allegedly linked to the army. The move came despite a Supreme Court ruling in January 2025 that declared military trials of civilians unconstitutional. The top court ordered the military to halt all ongoing trials of civilians and to transfer them to the civilian court system. President Yoweri Museveni is expected to sign the bill into law. If signed into law, the bill will allow military courts to try nonmilitary personnel who are accused of committing offenses in collaboration with soldiers. The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights has said that military courts “should not, in any circumstances whatsoever, have jurisdiction over civilians.”
Trump Admin Revokes Harvard’s International Student Certification
The Trump administration revoked Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) certification, barring it from enrolling international students, citing the school’s refusal to provide behavioral records of visa holders. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem warned other institutions, said that Harvard’s actions violated federal reporting requirements and would prevent the school from admitting foreign students for the 2025–2026 academic year. According to Harvard University’s One World programme, the Ivy League institution has so far enrolled about 6,793 international students. This policy is the latest attempt to pressure the university and other elite universities in the US as part of the Trump administration’s broader effort to change race-conscious admissions policies and challenge what it considers to be liberal bias in academia. The decision followed months of federal scrutiny, including aid freezes and investigations into alleged racial preferences in education. Harvard condemned the move as retaliatory and reaffirmed its support for academic freedom and its diverse international community.
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ECOWAS Faces Existential Crisis Amid Sahel Alliance Rise
The West African geopolitical landscape is undergoing a seismic shift due to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) inability to effectively address the region’s political and security challenges has eroded faith in its vision. The institution lost its legendary prestige in the eyes of West Africans, and its conduct has caused instability in the region. The rise of the Alliance of Sahel States (ASS), comprising Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso, led by military juntas, represents not only a daring step but also a fundamental challenge to the existing West African organization. ECOWAS was also criticized for deferring to Western interests, ignoring governance crises, and failing to uphold democratic principles. After fifty years of existence, ECOWAS is at risk of disappearing if many of its current leaders continue to turn a deaf ear to the rightful desires of their people.
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