Category Archives: Uganda
Ugandan Director of ‘Computers for Africa’ visits NYC to Discuss Need for Computers while Reducing E-Waste
You may not have heard of the non-profit ‘Computers for Africa‘, but they seem to have been very effective at getting refurbished computers to schools in Africa. According to their latest press release they have ‘refurbished thousands of computers into labs for schools in 132 Communities serving 70,000 Students & staff’ in Uganda and two other East African countries. Â I like the way they focus on sustainability through training in maintenance and repair and reduction of e-trash.
The Director of Ugandan operations will be in New York City to promote their latest initiative called ‘Mouse on a Mission’.
COMPUTERS FOR AFRICA Organization Reduces E-Waste & Provides Sustainable Hardware for Uganda’s Growing Information Infrastructure
Director of Ugandan Operations in New York City through Monday
Press Release: April 22, 2010
New York: A little-known non-profit organization is launching a major initiative this spring, and making an exponential, international difference. Computers for Africa (CFA) is an Omaha-based organization that has refurbished thousands of computers into labs for schools in 132 Communities serving 70,000 Students & staff. And this year, they’Â’re launching a new program targeting people who know a computer mouse opens a world of opportunity and want to make a mouse-sized contribution to positively impact rural African schools.
This spring, the “Mouse on a Mission” program launches to provide individuals and organizations with the opportunity to make a difference in education in Africa, and itÂ’s being kicked off with a special visit from Herbert Busiku, CFAÂ’s Director of Ugandan Operations, who works on the ground to advocate for Uganda’s fiber optic cable infrastructure, and provide access to and lessons on refurbished PCs in Kampala. Mr. Busiku arrived in the US on a month-long tour to promote the new program, and to show American students how they can impact the lives of African students.
Over a decade ago, Computers for Africa was co-founded by Tim and Ruth Leacock, after living in Africa for two years advocating for infrastructure, establishing relationships, and ensuring the programÂ’s viability/sustainability in Uganda, and two other East African countries. They built the organization to run sustainably, not only by qualifying beneficiaries and by passing on skills to maintain and repair their hardware, but also by strengthening local relationships. CFA focuses on one region at a time, helping 25 schools each year collaborate as they progress through their. program.
Today, Ruth Leacock, CFA’s Board Chair, says, “We don’t just send computers. We send labs with computers that have been cleaned, tested and loaded with software. And we send spare parts, so if anything happens during transport, we can fix it at the set up stage. 99% of our machines are up and running properly within a few months. ”
Over a period of 3 years, CFA has provided 80 schools in Northern Uganda with labs. Mr. Busiku explains CFAÂ’s focus on Northern Uganda, and says “ItÂ’s because of the civil war that raged for decades there that we focused on getting computer labs for vocational and secondary schools serving former child soldiers and other victims of the insurgency. We want to make sure that students have access to a world of resources, while at the same time ensuring that our computers don’t become e-trash a year after they’re sent over. We don’t use any clones, which are flooding the country with hazardous waste.”
How To Get Involved
Each “Mouse on a Mission” arrives with keyboard, monitor, PC, and networking capabilities. The Mouse helps make it possible for East African schools to receive a computer lab, training in computer maintenance and repair, and assistance with Internet connection. Each donated computer will serve about 50 students, taking them through 4 – 5 years of school before itÂ’s no longer usable. Despite the governmentÂ’s zero taxes on importation of computers, they remain well above what the rural population can afford on an average income of less than $2 per day.
To learn more about CFA’s “Mouse on a Mission” program, click here.
Africa Agriculture : 482 Words About Uganda
[Photo credit: Nourishing The Planet]
Guest Post by By Danielle Nierenberg and Bernard Pollack, BorderJumpers.org
People here are very laid back and the feeling is contagious! We managed to go three days without a cup of coffee didn’t seem to mind.
You hear the words “Hakuna Matata” everywhere. Literally.
Internet services down nationwide all day? Hakuna Matata…
Flights cancelled? Hakuna Matata…
Two hours in wall-to-wall rush hour traffic in Kampala? Hakuna Matata…
In the Mukono District, about an hour outside of Kampala, Uganda, we met Edward Mukiibi and Roger Serunjogi, coordinators of the Developing Innovations in School Cultivation (DISC) project. Edward, 23, and Roger, 22 are improving nutrition, environmental awareness and food traditions by establishing school gardens at preschool, day and boarding schools. By teaching kids early about growing, preparing, and eating food they hope to cultivate the next generation of farmers and eaters who can preserve Uganda’s culinary traditions. “If a person doesn’t know how to cook or prepare food, they don’t know how to eat,†says Edward.
One DISC student, 19 year-old Mary Naku, says she’s gained leadership and farming skills from the program. “As youth we have learned to grow fruits and vegetables,†she says, “to support our lives.†Thanks to DISC, students see agriculture as a way to make money, help their communities, and preserve biodiversity.
At the HIV/AIDS Resource Center in Katuna (on the border between Uganda and Rwanda and one of many towns along what is known as the Northern Transport Corridor—a span of highway that stretches from Mombasa, Kenya through Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan and all the way to Djibouti), we were introduced to the important work of the Solidarity Center and Uganda’s Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union (ATGWU). The Solidarity Center is a non-profit launched by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), to empower workers around the world by helping them form unions.
The Center and ATGWU are working with truckers, who have some of the highest rates of HIV/AIDS in Eastern Africa due to the frequent and lengthy delays at the border which often lead to boredom, drinking and unsafe sex, by providing care, support and information through one-on-one or community group outreach. The Center also provides free testing for truck drivers, already more than 5,000 of them to date.
We would be remiss if we didn’t mention that Uganda, like most of the countries in Africa, is full of contradictions. While we were there, the “Bahati Bill” was introduced in parliament, calling for life in prison—and in some case the death penalty—for people found “guilty†of homosexual activity. As gay marriage laws are passed around the world, including most recently in Mexico City, it’s hard to believe that lawmakers would punish people for being gay or having HIV/AIDS.
But as we traveled we couldn’t help but immediately feel, and fall in love with, the pulse and energy of the bustling country.
Video (Home Sweet Uganda): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7arx1tGe__M
Related video:
Suggested Books
- Stepping-Stones to Improve upon Functioning of Participatory Agricultural Extention Programmes: Farmer Field Schools in Uganda
- Experiences, Innovations and Issues in Agricultural Extention in Uganda. Lessons and Prospects

Winners of EDUCATING AFRICA Awards 2009 announced!
On the 29th of March 2010 a UK-based NGO Teach A Man To Fish announced winners of the ‘EDUCATING AFRICA Pan-African Awards for Entrepreneurship in Education 2009’. This was the third edition of the competition organized by Teach A Man To Fish.
The top three prize winners were:
1st Prize Educate! (Uganda) is an organization working in Uganda since 2002 that aims to foster entrepreneurship in students they work with by teaching their unique social change curriculum. In place of building its own school or giving scholarships to the current education system, Educate! works as a centralized education program that operates in partner schools across Uganda. In those schools students are assisted to create financially sustainable social enterprise initiatives in their community through the provision of a supportive, mentoring environment in which they develop their confidence, creativity, and leadership. Students thus gain a solid foundation in entrepreneurial leadership to drive sustainable development in Uganda.
2nd Prize House of Nations (Madagascar) is a community based organization operating in Madagascar. The aim of the primary school that was established by House of Nations is not just to feed pupils with government program but also to help them to focus on character building. The project aims to rise new generation to overcome the mindset of poverty and to bring transformation among its own communities and all over Madagascar.
3rd Prize Mama Zimbi (Ghana) Â is involved in Ghana and supports the Widowhood Alliance Network (WANE) project that was instituted to economically empower widows in Ghana through the provision of a pragmatic programme of education and self-sustaining business trades. The project has provided to date about 2,000 direct and 6,000 indirect jobs to widows in many Ghanaian communities.
Find out more about the winners HERE
They were selected by a panel of international judges from a pool of 260 applicants from across Africa. The best entry submitted by Educate! will receive a prize of $10,000 and the two runners-up will be given prizes of $5,000. This year also a record number of 23 country prizes of $1,000 will be awarded, with a further 5 organizations receiving commendations for their work.
The aim of the competition was to identify and celebrate the achievements of social entrepreneurs who understand the role education can play within their communities. ‘With this competition we were looking for programmes which are innovative, sustainable and create real impact – and we have found them. We hope through these awards to show that Africa is a continent of hope with much to be proud of. If by highlighting the best we can inspire the wider education community to aspire even higher, then the future will be a much brighter place for us all!’, says Nik Kafka, Managing Director of Teach A Man To Fish.
Africa IMF Reports : Uganda 2009
IMF report for Uganda 2009
Country Report No. 09/36: Uganda and Rwanda: Selected Issues
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.cfm?sk=22662.0
All information from http://www.imf.org
To view and print pdf files you need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader which is available at http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep.html
Suggested Amazon Books
- Crisis, Adjustment and Growth in Uganda: A Study of Adaptation in an African Economy (Studies in the African Economies)
- Uganda, 5th: The Bradt Travel Guide
Africa Politics : Gay Issues in Malawi and Uganda
The following Guest Post by J Kainja addresses one of the controversial issues that is concerning many people in Africa at the moment. You may not agree with what he says, but the questions he asks are good ones and deserve consideration.
Gay Rights in Africa: What is the Donor Community Up To?
January 20, 2010 1:55pm, previously posted at Eldis Community Blogs
The dictatorial manner in which  the donor community is handling gay issues in Malawi and Uganda clearly shows that they are not driven by Africa’s best interests but rather, pushing their own agenda. This is a wake up call for African nations to rethink donor intervention in African affairs.
The issue of gay rights in Malawi and Uganda has recently received unprecedented international attention, and rightly so. Two separate issues have ignited the debate within the said countries and condemnation from the international community.
First is Malawi’s arrest of two gay men after their alleged wedding, which according to Malawi authorities was against the law and a crime punishable by up to 14 years imprisonment. On the other hand, Uganda has been criticised for its ‘private members bill’ that proposes to punish all gays with life imprisonment.
There is a famous concept that the world is not a bad place because it has bad people but it is because of the good people who do not stand up against evil. In the spirit of this saying, I find it appropriate that international community, including reputable organisations like Amnesty International have stood up for the rights of gay communities, and they have duly called for the release of the arrested homosexuals in Malawi.
Meanwhile, the issue has not only highlighted the huge cultural and ideological gulf between the West and the East, but it has also opened a whole bucket of worms that could have some serious implications on international relations.
According to Timesonline, Uganda’s president, Yoweri Museveni, has distanced himself from an anti-homosexuality bill currently before the Ugandan parliament in Kampala after pressure from the Prime Ministers of Britain, Gordon Brown, and Canada, Stephen Harper, and the United States’ secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.
Timesonline has also reported that United Kingdom’s ‘Queen’s music composer’, Sir Peter Maxwell Davis, has called on the Scottish government to suspended its aid to Malawi until the government of Malawi frees the gay couple currently in custody under anti-gay laws.
Malawi’s Information Minister Leckford Mwanza Thoto holds that the gay couple have broken the laws of the land, hence the ‘government cannot interfere in the court process’ [presumably emphasising the separation of powers]. The minister also adds: ‘we depend on our Western friends, yes, but we are a sovereign country.’
As much as I believe the Western countries are acting in the interest of the gay community, I also think that this case has exposed the fragility of Africa’s so called independent countries. Scotland contributes £3 million of the forty percent budgetary support that Malawi gets from the donor community. In 2008 / 2009, the Ugandan government received £35 million in budgetary support from the UK government. The donor community consequently feels that the African countries [receiving support] must toe their line.
The gay rights issue is cultural if not an ideological. There should be a rational discussion to find ways of dealing with it. Threatening Uganda and Malawi with aid freeze / withdrawal may get the donor community their intended results but it will not change people’s ideologies and beliefs. This can only be done through discussion as equal partnered.
The West must not imply that they are the all consuming ogres of knowledge to do the teaching but not the learning from ‘others.’ Such a mentality and will only breed resistance.
Africa is a home to 17 million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who according to Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), often have very limited or no access to food, employment, education and healthcare. The IDMC further states: “large number of IDPs are caught in desperate situations amidst fighting or in remote and inaccessible areas cut-off from international assistance. Others have been forced to live away from their homes for many years, or even decades, because the conflicts that caused their displacement remained unresolved.”
IDPs are people who are forced to flee their homes but who, unlike refugees, remain within their country’s borders. While refugees are eligible to receive international protection and help under the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 1967 Protocol, the international community is not under the same legal obligation to protect and assist the IDPs.
How does the donor community and indeed the international media explain their reluctance to fight for the rights of these IDPs when they can do it for the gay community?
Museveni has backed down on the proposed anti-homosexual bill under pressure from the donor community; but why did the very same donor community fail to react when Museveni failed to protect an estimated 2 million of his people displaced by the Lord’s Resistance Army in northern Uganda?
The donor community has powers to force policy changes but when it applies double standards, Africans must question what it is up to.
Africa Environment Uganda : Behind the scenes at Copenhagen
Copenhagen has been the biggest show on earth this week with the mass walkout of African representatives from the talks hitting the news and the heightened tension of the last few days emphasising the division between developing countries and the rest of the world. The following article from IRIN NEWS highlights a small NGO from Uganda and gives just one view of the talks going on in Copenhagen. Everyone has a different tale, but behind the scene glimpses such as this one gives us more insight and background to what we hear on the news.
GLOBAL: Not quite “Hopenhagen”?
COPENHAGEN, 17 December 2009 (IRIN) – When you are a small NGO from a poor country in the South, how can you hope to make yourself heard at the climate change talks in Copenhagen? One answer is to get more influential NGOs in the North to do it for you – engaging public opinion tand urging their governments to help the vulnerable cope with the increasingly erratic weather.
As the Copenhagen conference nears its end, IRIN takes a behind-the-scenes look at the strategizing and manoeuvrings, the highs and lows that an NGO from Uganda – the National Association of Professional Environmentalists (NAPE) – has experienced in the past few days.
A few years ago, NAPE’s Kamese Geoffrey would never have imagined sharing tables with government ministers from his country. “But things have changed at this conference; our countries in Africa face a desperate situation, they need all the support they can get,” he said.
When not lobbying for support for poor countries, whenever his government called on him he provided feedback and assistance on policy adaptation, and the REDD strategy – Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and (forest) Degradation (in developing countries) – which looked like being one of the positive outcomes from Copenhagen, until earlier this week.
The first week
Geoffrey has friends and relatives who are still recovering from a drought in the Acholi and Teso regions in northern Uganda, after experiencing one of the area’s worst floods in 2008. “You come into this conference with a lot of hope, thinking, ‘We will all sit here and come up with a strategy to help all those people back home, maybe give them some tools to be better able to adapt to this cycle of droughts and floods.’”
Hope has been steadily evaporating. Braving the bitter cold weather, some NGOs began the first week of the talks on 7 December determined to be optimistic about “Hopenhagen” – the International Advertising Association’s line for the conference.
But then African countries started taking Geoffrey’s NGO and others into their confidence, telling them the European Union had put on the table an offer of just more than US$10 billion annually over the next three years for adaptation. “The Sudanese ambassador, Lumumba Di-Aping, called us and said, ‘What do we do about this?’ The money is nothing compared to what some estimates, like the World Bank, have said poor countries would need, which is more than $100 billion a year,” Geoffrey said.
“This was unacceptable, so we got in touch with the NGOs from the North, who have good relations with their governments, to try to influence them. We all got in touch with international NGOs, who instantly issued statements to criticize the amount of money being pledged. We had press briefings, so we managed to mobilize a lot of support.”
Geoffrey has also been attending sessions on the adaptation track of the text that is the basis for negotiations. “It has been depressing. There are some countries who think they are going to do us a favour by helping the poor countries, but this is really about helping all of us – everyone is going to be affected by climate change.” Sea level rise, intense and frequent droughts and storms, and erratic rainfall brought on by a changing global climate will affect countries in the North as much as in the South.
“You cannot say all the countries in the North are the same. I have delegates from rich countries come up to me and ask me about the situation in my country, but maybe not all of them give voice to their concerns because they are worried about the collective position, so you also have countries presenting their own positions on issues.”
Final week
The situation got stickier. The conference organizers – the Danish government – imposed a quota on the number of NGOs attending because the venue could not handle more than 15,000 people. “Our government [Uganda] has expressed support for us in private, saying they will miss all the support . we have been like the cheering crowd who makes a tired athlete push to do his best in the last leg of his run,” Geoffrey commented.
Efforts to get money for adaptation were still stuck, as were various promises regarding capacity building and technology transfer to help countries adapt. Protestors, demanding a greater commitment from the wealthy world, clashed with police on Wednesday as the talks sank into further acromony.
The hope of getting a good deal on REDD, a strategy for compensating countries for conserving their forests, swamps and fields, were dashed when two countries intervened, weakening the language on protecting the rights of forest-dependent communities.
Geoffrey cited the case of the Benet, an indigenous community who used to live on Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda, but were displaced to make way for an afforestation project. His country representatives at the conference summoned him to express their concern, so Geoffrey got in touch with the Global Forest Coalition – an international network of NGOs working on forestry-related issues – and together they called a press conference to spread the word.
He said there was a lot of solidarity among civil society organizations across the world, and hoped this could perhaps influence governments. “But our hopes are continuously being shattered here.”
Then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton swept into town. With the talks deadlocked and less than 36 hours to go before the end of the conference, she announced on Thursday that the US, along with the other rich countries, would be willing to mobilize $100 billion a year “from a wide variety” of resources to help poor countries adapt to climate change.
Geoffrey responded cautiously to Clinton’s offer: “It seems to be a positive move, but we have to see where the money is going to come from”, a reference to NGO and poor country government demands that aid for adaptation should be new money, and not raised from the “unpredictable” market.
© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org
[This item comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. Reposting or reproduction, with attribution, for non-commercial purposes is permitted. Terms and conditions: http://www.irinnews.org/copyright.aspx
Uganda : The Katine Project, a newspaper community project
Newspapers and development projects rarely appear in the same sentence unless it is negative reporting about some aspect of the project. But the Guardian and the Observer newspapers in the UK have broken the mould. For the last two years the newspapers have been supporting the work of the African Medical and Research Foundation (Amref) and Farm-Africa in a rural Ugandan village.
There is a dedicated website for the project http://www.guardian.co.uk/katine where you can find out more about the project. The website has lots of interactivity including videos, photos, a blog, lesson plans – and my favourite – a virtual village. In the virtual village you can follow the village as it develops, visiting the healthcare clinic, school, watch videos. You can watch films about community life, and learn about people in the village and follow their stories. There is a high level of accountability and accounts are published on the site so that donors can track the project. It’s an incredibly rich source which will really give you a really deep understanding of a village community in Uganda.

Uganda: Rural Development Report
Developing local areas
“A major problem facing developing countries is how to develop local areas. The economic decline of rural areas due to the declining value of traditional agriculture forces many young people to migrate to urban areas in search of better opportunities, incomes and standards of living. This yet, causes further decline to the rural areas and contributes to urban congestion and all its attendant problems.
This paper discusses the potential for adaptation of the Japanese ‘One Village One Product (OVOP paper) concept’ to Uganda’s poverty reduction and local development efforts. Uganda government strongly believes that local development, especially in rural areas, is a key to poverty reduction.”
Download the (pdf) report HERE

African Social Networking Inspiration: Ida Horner, Ethnic Supplies
I’ve been a follower of Ida Horner on Twitter for a while now and I enjoy following her tweets and her exploits. For me she is an inspiration. She’s a member of Ecademy which is a business social networking site. Today she was the subject of their ‘Social Networking Monday Morning Story‘.  Over the last few years Ida has slowly grown a collaborative network and has become an inspiration for us all. She now helps women to help themselves in Kenya, Madagascar, Tanzania and Uganda.
Read her story HERE.

Uganda : Livelihood impacts of disarmament in Karamoja
Disarmament policies
Changing roles, shifting risks – livelihood impacts of disarmament in Karamoja, Uganda, Stites,E. Akabwai,D. Feinstein International Center, USA (2009)
This report examines the role of disarmament policies in changes in livelihood systems of the population in the Karamoja region of northeastern Uganda. The following topics are covered:
- Disarmament and human rights abusesPerceptions of disarmament as a goal in and of itself
- Impacts of disarmament on livelihoods
- Impacts of disarmament on security for the rural communities in Karamoja.
The authors also provide a section on the implications for shifting gender and generational roles, relations and responsibilities. Throughout this discussion the nature of the existing protection gap in Karamoja is also examined.
The authors provide a number of conclusions/recommendations, including:
- Disarmament is needed in Karamoja and must be uniform and complete
- The introduction of kraals at barracks addresses some of the problems of inadequate protection for livestock that arose in the 2001-2002 disarmament and in the first period of the current disarmament
- International actors working in Karamoja must include vigorous advocacy with national and district authorities, including the security sector, to generate increased recognition of the needs in the region and respect for the population
- Outreach and learning by actors is critical – relatively few assessments of local priorities have been done in the region, particularly in remote areas or those considered insecure.
(Via ELDIS)
How to get a copy
Available online at:Â http://wikis.uit.tufts.edu/confluence/display/FIC/Changing+Roles%2C+Shifting+Risks
Ghana, Uganda, Kenya and South Africa school pix
Now this is a good idea – work with teachers and head teachers and give kids in African schools cameras and let them shoot away depicting life in their school and at home. I thought of doing this when doing my PhD, but at the time it didn’t work out. I think it is still a good idea though, and kudos to PBS for doing it to show US kids and others about the lives of African kids.
Have a look at the site and see what the kids came up with.
Here’s a sample:
Welcome to the West African Secondary School in Ghana!
See the rest of the Ghanaian school pix
Welcome to the Mengo Senior School!

See the rest of the Ugandan school pix
Welcome to the Canon Kituri Secondary School!
See the rest of the Kenyan school pix
Welcome to Winterveldt, South Africa. Take a Tour with Us!

See the rest of the South African school pix

Uganda, Malaria, Artemisinin and Politics
An old story
Back in 2005 a story broke about the large scale production of artemisinin in Uganda and how two Ugandan companies were exporting the crude form of the drug to the World Health Organisation. Clovis Kabaseke, a Ugandan farmer and project manager came to notice at that time,and his story has now been made into a film ‘The plant that cures malaria‘.
A dream come true?
As you can imagine, for many Ugandan farmers this must have seemed like a dream come true. A cash crop that not only was worthwhile financially but one which addressed a serious health problem that affected so many in Africa and elsewhere in the world. But another more recent article I read showed that despite the huge demand for artemisinin world prices were dropping. An article in the Ugandan newspaper, Sunday Monitor, had the curious title ‘Farmers rake in millions from malaria drug‘. The title is curious not because farmers are doing well out of producing the cash crop, but because the bottom has dropped out of the market for artemisinin. According to the article, ‘World market prices fell from $350 per Kg in 2005 to $200 per Kg in 2007′. The bulk of the crop in Uganda is sold to India. Ugandan farmers rushing to transfer from the traditional cash-crop of sorghum were left with rotting leaves uncollected by the company. The article goes on to say that the company was planning to diversify and promote the growth of other crops such as: Davana; Chillies; Fennel; Jasmine Rose; Ginger; Vettiver; Basil; and many more others, most of which are used in the production of essential oils and perfumes. The botanical extraction plant which is used to extract artemisinin can be used for other plants too, although artemisinin will continue to be produced.
There were several features about this story that interested me. If you look at the wikipedia article for artemisinin, you’ll see that there is some surprising politicking going on. Artemesia has been used for a thousand years in Chinese medicine to cure malaria and other diseases. A Chinese research project in the 1960s & 70s by the Chinese army trying to find a malaria cure found Artemisia annua (annual wormwood) cleared malaria parasites from the body quicker than any of the other plants they tested. Eventually news of this break through leaked out to the West and in the early 1980s, according to the Wikipedia article:
The World Health Organisation (WHO) tried to contact Chinese scientists and officials to find out more, but drew a blank. Dr Ying Lee, one of the scientists involved in the research into Artemisinin, said the Chinese distrusted the West. The Chinese suspected the West just wanted to exploit the drug and sell it around the world slightly altered and repatented. The fact that there were several Americans on the WHO’s steering board on malaria and that some were from the military did not help clear the distrust. It can be noted Americans had just invested a lot into Mefloquine, a synthetic version of Chloroquine.
Artemisinin is used in combination with a number of other drugs which increase its efficacy.
ACT (artemisinin-based combination therapy); other examples are artemether-lumefantrine, artesunate-mefloquine, artesunate-amodiaquine, and artesunate-sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine. Recent trials have shown that ACT is more than 90% effective, with a recovery of malaria after three days, especially for the chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum.
The last paragraph in the wiki article struck me as particularly interesting following the Ugandan project.
To counter the present shortage in leaves of Artemisia annua, researchers have been searching for a way to develop artemisinin artificially in the laboratory. A recent paper in Naturepresented a genetically engineered yeast that can synthesize a precursor called artemisinic acid which can be chemically converted to Artemisinin. The compound called OZ-277 (also known as RBx11160), developed by Jonathan Vennerstrom at the University of Nebraska, has proved to be even more effective than the natural product in test-tube trials. A six month trial of the drug on human subjects in Thailand was started in January 2005. There are also plans to have the plant grow in other areas of the world outside Vietnam and China (Kenya, Tanzania, Madagascar)
What is going on? Why is the price of artemesinin being driven so low?
Suggested BooksÂ
- Intensifying the Fight Against Malaria: The World Bank’s Booster Program for Malaria Control in Africa (Document of the World Bank)
- Malaria and Poverty in Africa
- The Making of a Tropical Disease: A Short History of Malaria (Johns Hopkins Biographies of Disease)


