African Parliamentary Speakers Adopt Resolution to Support Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
By Henry Neondo
JOHANNESBURG---African Speakers of Parliaments and Presidents of Senate on Monday unanimously adopted a landmark resolution on a Declaration of Commitment to prioritize support for increased policy and budget action on maternal, newborn and child health in African countries.
The commitment is the first of its kind by African Speakers of Parliament, and marks a significant milestone in accelerating progress in Africa towards the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5 on Child and Maternal Health, respectively.
Presiding over the adoption of the resolution at a conference in Midrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, the Pan African Parliament President Hon. Dr. Moussa Idriss Ndélé emphasized that “parliamentary support is crucial for successful implementation of African Union Summit Decisions and African development priorities.”
In the communiqué issued at the end of the conference, the speakers committed to“prioritise policy and budget support for implementation of African Union Summit Decisions, in particular the Kampala July 2010 Summit Declaration on the Summit theme of “Actions on Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Development in Africa.”
In July 2010, the African Union heads of states and governments made far-reaching commitments towards maternal and infant health at a high-level summit held in Kampala, Uganda.
The landmark commitment by African Speakers will contribute towards ending the preventable tragic annual death of over 4 million African children under the age of 5; the annual death of an estimated 189,000 African women due to child birth related complications, and injury of millions more due to poor health care; and avoidable tragedy of an estimated 370,000 African children born with HIV every year.
Thanking the Speakers of Parliament and the Pan African Parliament for their milestone action on Maternal and Child Health, Rotimi Sankore, Secretary of the Africa Public Health Parliamentary Network, stated in his presentation during the Speakers conference that: “We look forward to working with parliaments on accelerated action to end the tragedy of an estimated over 45 million deaths of African children under the age of 5 years over the last decade since the Millennium Declaration in 2000.
It is estimated that at least 1.9 million women die from child birth-related causes; and the birth of an estimated 3.7 million children are born with HIV.
“While there has undoubtedly been significant progress over the past decade, this level of mortality indicates that the progress is not yet fast enough, and we all need to work more urgently to implement African and global targets,” said Rotimi.
In his presentation to the Speakers of Parliament during their conference, the Africa Regional Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Bunmi Makinwa underlined UNFPA’s commitment to strengthen its work with, and enhance capacity of the Pan African Parliament and country parliaments in implementing MNCH programmes.
Makinwa called on the Speakers of Parliament to “become champions of the AU Campaign for Accelerated Reduction of Maternal and Child Mortality (CARMMA) in your respective countries and constituencies; and Increase budgetary allocations to health in your respective parliaments.”
Global health experts and campaigners welcomed the commitment of African Speakers and reiterated that parliaments have a significant role to play in strengthening policy and budgetary support towards maternal and infant health in Africa.
Dr. Carole Presern, Director of The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn &Child Health, commended the Speakers’Declaration of Commitment as “an important step by African parliamentary leaders towards saving and improving lives of millions of African women and children. This also underscores the positive role that parliaments can play globally in saving the lives of women and children thatdie from preventable causes.