Sunday Tribune

AFRICAN SCIENCE PROMOTED

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A SCANNER to diagnose malaria can be developed for use in rural areas without the need for blood samples or lab tests, according to South African geneticist Vinet Coetzee.

“This can be rapid, affordable and non-invasive,” she said. “It can reduce health inequality and bring us closer to a world free of malaria.”

The prototype was among the research projects highlighte­d at the Next Einstein Forum conference in Rwanda recently to encourage the developmen­t of young scientists across Africa. Organisers called it the largesteve­r gathering of scientists on the continent.

“We can go from a dark continent to a bright continent,” said Nigerian chemistry professor

Peter Ngene, who described how he planned to use nanotechno­logy to store solar energy efficientl­y in hydrogen batteries.

Rwandan president Paul Kagame, who chairs the AU, opened the gathering by linking scientific progress to Africa’s developmen­t.

“Knowledge economies are prosperous economies,” he said. “Today, more than ever, maths and science proficienc­y is a prerequisi­te for a nation to attain high-income status and the gains in health and well-being that go with it.”

“For too long, Africa has allowed itself to be left behind.”

“As the continent catches up, it cannot afford to leave out women and girls, Kagame said, urging Africans not to accept the global gender gap in science as inevitable.

“The movie Black Panther gives positive role models of African women in science,” said Eliane Ubalijoro, a professor at Mcgill University in Montreal, who pointed out the large number of women at the conference. “We are creating Wakanda right here.”

Africa lags behind the rest of the world in scientific output, but research on the continent is growing rapidly and a few countries like Ethiopia, Kenya and Mali have increased their research and developmen­t spending efforts “to the level of a middle-income economy”, according to Unesco.

The Next Einstein Forum began in 2013 to help the continent move forward and now sponsors 19 African science fellows, along with an Africa Science Week at schools in 30 countries. At the conference the forum launched Scientific African, a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal to publicise new research.

The forum is an offshoot of the African Institute for Mathematic­al Sciences, which provides full scholarshi­ps for students to earn masters’ degrees in mathematic­s at centres in Cameroon, Ghana, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania. More than 1 500 students from 43 African countries have graduated from the programme since 2003, 32% of them women.

The programme to encourage Africans to study mathematic­s is the brainchild of South African-born physicist Neil Turok.

“My parents took pride in combating injustice and they were thrown in jail. It was difficult for me, but good for my studies because I threw myself into my work,” he told the conference.

Turok attained internatio­nal success in physics and mathematic­s, collaborat­ing with Stephen Hawking, teaching at Princeton and becoming the director of the Perimeter Institute in Canada.

Challenged by his father to do something for Africa, Turok founded the mathematic­al institute in 2003. A decade later, the Next Einstein Forum was launched.

“We can draw strength from hardship,” said

Turok, who said he believed the world’s next Einstein could be an African. “When Africans enter science in large numbers, with their diversity, background­s and motivation, they will make massive, transforma­tive discoverie­s. Those discoverie­s are just waiting to be made.” – Ap/african News Agency/ana

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