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The panel, which was appointed by the UN Secretary General, Ban
Ki-Moon, was tasked to find ways of responding to various health
pandemics. It will make recommendations on strengthening national and
international systems to prevent and manage future health crises.
A statement availed to The Guardian yesterday said President
Kikwete, who arrived in New York yesterday, will chair the high- level
panel for four days.
Other panel members include Celso Luiz Nunes Amorimo, former
Minister of Foreign Relations (1993-1994 and 2003-2010) and Minister
of Defense of Brazil, Micheline Calmy-Rey, former President of the Swiss
Confederation Marty Natalegawa, former Foreign minister and Permanent
Representative of Indonesia to the UN in New York.
Others are Joy Phumaphi, Executive Secretary of the African Leaders
Malaria Alliance, Rajiv Shah and Administrator of the United States
Agency for International Development (USAID).
They were tasked to find out how to respond to various health
pandemics and make recommendations to strengthen national and
international systems to prevent and manage future health crises,
especially from lessons learned during the Ebola outbreak.
Ban Ki-Moon appointed the High Level Panel following the Ebola outbreak in West Africa which has been the world’s deadliest.
Its spread in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone has called for the
necessity to strengthen the management of various health pandemics in
future.
Before the meeting the panel will hold talks with the SG who had
already requested them to give regular reports on the task and submit
the final report in December this year.
Ban Ki-Moon will submit the report to the UN Council at the end
of next December and a decision will be made basing on the
recommendations.
At its first meeting the panel will set out strategies on how to
work on the matter and its business plan by consulting the SG. It will
be meeting in every six weeks.SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN
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