The global effort to fight bird flu and prepare for a threatened
pandemic will cost more than the $1,9-billion already pledged, and
more support is needed in Indonesia, which is “seriously
affected” by the virus, a United Nations envoy said.
David Nabarro, the UN's senior coordinator for avian and pandemic
flu, said the money promised by donor countries and organizations
at a conference in Beijing in January won't be enough to sustain
programs aimed at identifying and controlling the virus in poultry,
and upgrading laboratories and hospitals.
“We are just at the beginning,” Nabarro, 57, said
yesterday in an interview in Singapore, where he was attending the
annual meetings of the Washington-based International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank. “We are going to need to have a pipeline
of funding for further work in the next few years both in the
animal sector and also in the human sector.”
Human fatalities from the H5N1 avian influenza strain have almost
tripled this year, providing more chances for the virus to mutate
into a lethal pandemic form. A severe pandemic similar to the one
that killed 50-million people in 1918 may cause global economic
losses of as much as $2-trillion, Jim Adams, head of the World
Bank's avian flu taskforce, told reporters in Singapore
yesterday.
The H5N1 virus is known to have infected 246 people in 10
countries, killing 144, since 2003, the World Health Organization
said on September 14. Millions could die if it becomes easily
transmissible between people, causing a global outbreak.
“We cannot predict how it will happen, and so we encourage
communities, governments, and private entities to get prepared for
a pandemic that might start anytime,” Nabarro told reporters
in Singapore yesterday.
More than half the 66 fatalities reported this year have occurred
in Indonesia, where the virus is reported to have infected at least
two people a month during the past year.
Indonesian authorities have intensified efforts to control the
virus during the past few months, Nabarro said. “I am very
impressed with the progress that I have seen, but I want to see
greater investment not only by government but also by the
international community in Indonesia.”
The World Bank is finalizing an agreement with the Indonesian
government on a $15-million grant, Adams said. About $1,2-billion
of the $1,9-billion promised in January has been committed, he
said. At least part of the $700-million that's not yet committed
may be directed at programs in Africa.
Representatives of about 100 countries will meet in Mali's capital,
Bamako, later this year to discuss funding needs. “There will
be on the table a request for some increases in dedicated funds to
Africa,” Adams said in an interview. “What we will be
looking for from Bamako are some incremental commitments from
donors, either from unallocated or additional funds, to fund the
specific African programs that are going to emerge.”
In Africa, where H5N1 was first reported in Nigeria in February,
the virus has spread to Niger, Egypt, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Ivory
Coast and Djibouti.
The continent will require $760-million over the next three years
to help prevent avian flu, according to a report released in June
by a coalition of international governmental organizations known as
the ALive initiative.
Avian flu in Africa could spread rapidly because of insufficient
financial and logistical resources, weak veterinary services, lax
border controls and government conflicts, the coalition said in its
report.
“There is a shortage of funds in some of the countries that
really are fighting an uphill struggle to control avian influenza
and also to prepare for the pandemic,'' Nabarro said.
“Please make sure that Africa, that Indonesia, and that
countries with great needs do manage to access the resources they
require.'' |