Mpox Outbreaks in Africa Could Be Ended in 6 Months, WHO Chief Says

 Sumaya Hatungimana, 12, shows the marks on her hands after recovering from mpox, outside her house in Kinama zone, in Bujumbura, Burundi, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
Sumaya Hatungimana, 12, shows the marks on her hands after recovering from mpox, outside her house in Kinama zone, in Bujumbura, Burundi, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
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Mpox Outbreaks in Africa Could Be Ended in 6 Months, WHO Chief Says

 Sumaya Hatungimana, 12, shows the marks on her hands after recovering from mpox, outside her house in Kinama zone, in Bujumbura, Burundi, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
Sumaya Hatungimana, 12, shows the marks on her hands after recovering from mpox, outside her house in Kinama zone, in Bujumbura, Burundi, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)

The head of the World Health Organization believes the ongoing mpox outbreaks in Africa might be stopped in the next six months, and said Friday that the agency's first shipment of vaccines should arrive in Congo within days.

To date, Africa has received just a tiny fraction of the vaccines needed to slow the spread of the virus, especially in Congo, which has the most cases — more than 18,000 suspected cases and 629 deaths.

“With the governments’ leadership and close cooperation between partners, we believe we can stop these outbreaks in the next six months,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a press briefing.

He said that while mpox infections have been rising quickly in the last few weeks, there have been relatively few deaths. Tedros also noted there were 258 cases of the newest version of mpox, with patients identified in Burundi, Rwanda, Kenya, Uganda, Sweden and Thailand.

Earlier this month, WHO declared the ongoing mpox outbreaks in Africa a global emergency, hoping to spur a robust global response to the disease on a continent where cases were spreading largely unnoticed for years, including in Nigeria. In May, scientists detected a new version of the disease in Congo that they think could be spreading more easily.

Mpox, also known as monkeypox, is related to smallpox but typically causes milder symptoms, including fever, headache and body aches. In severe cases, people can develop painful sores and blisters on the face, chest, hands and genitals. Mpox is typically spread via close skin-to-skin contact.

WHO estimated about 230,000 vaccines could be sent “imminently” to Congo and elsewhere. The agency said it was also working on education campaigns to raise awareness of how people could avoid spreading mpox in countries with outbreaks.

Maria Van Kerkhove, who directs WHO's epidemic and pandemic diseases department, said the agency was working to expedite vaccine access for affected countries — given the limited supply available.

Scientists have previously pointed out that without a better understanding of how mpox is spreading in Africa, it may be difficult to know how best to use the shots.

Earlier this week, the head of Africa's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the continent was hoping to receive about 380,000 doses of mpox vaccines promised by donors, including the US and the European Union. That’s less than 15% of the doses authorities have said are needed to end the mpox outbreaks in Congo.



Israeli FM Accuses ‘Octopus’ Khamenei of Smuggling Weapons into West Bank via Jordan

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz (AFP)
Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz (AFP)
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Israeli FM Accuses ‘Octopus’ Khamenei of Smuggling Weapons into West Bank via Jordan

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz (AFP)
Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz (AFP)

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz accused on Thursday Iran of attempting to establish an “eastern terror front” against Israel via Jordan, the Times of Israel reported.

Katz — who has faced some criticism for his style of online diplomatic attacks — published an AI-generated image showing Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei as an octopus with many tentacles.

The foreign minister said the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps is smuggling weapons from Syria into Jordan, “attempting to destabilize the regime and turn the Israel-Jordan border from a peaceful one into a volatile front.”

The weapons are then brought into the West Bank, he added, “where an Iranian-Hamas terror infrastructure is being established.”

Katz called for a security fence to be built “quickly” along the Israel-Jordan border, something that has been promised for more than a decade by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu but has been dismissed by security officials as a pipe dream.