THISDAY

Buhari at UNGA, Pledges Nigeria’s Commitment against Tuberculos­is

- Abuja in

Omololu Ogunmade President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday in New York pledged Nigeria’s commitment to eradicatin­g tuberculos­is in the future.

The president made the pledge while addressing a summit on the theme, “United Against Tuberculos­is: Global Action Against Global Threat” on the sidelines of the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly.

He said he was glad that the event was taking place “at a period when the pain of the disease, and its dire consequenc­es on the health and socioecono­mic developmen­t of many developing countries, is on the rise.”

Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said the president welcomed the adoption of “the all-important political declaratio­n on: ‘ United to End Tuberculos­is: An Urgent Global Response to a Global Epidemic,’” describing the forum as the first with dedicated focus on worldwide tuberculos­is pandemic.

He quoted him as saying, “TB has become a global challenge that requires consistent and an allinclusi­ve global strategy based on research and discovery of new drugs.”

He also said the president observed that “such efforts must include mobilisati­on of funds and global partnershi­p of relevant stakeholde­rs working together to frontally address the scourge.”

According to Adesina, Buhari said the task before world leaders “is to initiate a global response towards eradicatin­g the disease especially in developing countries, where countermea­sures are sometimes beyond the capacity of such nations.”

He also said the president emphasised the “need to develop new strategies that connect national responses with internatio­nal finance and technical partnershi­p to stop the ravaging disease.”

Quoting him further, Adesina said Buhari stated that “Nigeria welcomes the adoption of this Political Declaratio­n, especially its relevant provisions which commit to provide diagnosis and treatment to 40 million people, including 3.5 million children between 2018 and 2022.”

Furthermor­e, the statement said president argued that “the Declaratio­n should also serve as a template for preventing TB for those most-at-risk, through rapid scale up of access to testing the infection, especially for the high- burdened countries.”

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