Britain’s Queen Elizabeth backs her son Charles to take on Commonwealth role

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth said she hoped her son Prince Charles would succeed her as leader of the Commonwealth at the formal opening of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, at Buckingham Palace, in London. (Reuters)
Updated 19 April 2018
Follow

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth backs her son Charles to take on Commonwealth role

  • Queen Elizabeth: “It is my sincere wish that the Commonwealth will continue to offer stability and continuity for future generations and will decide that one day the Prince of Wales should carry on the important work started by my father in 1949.”
  • The leader of Britain’s opposition party suggested on Sunday the position should be rotated around the members.

LONDON: Britain’s Queen Elizabeth said on Thursday she hoped her son and heir Prince Charles would take on leadership of the Commonwealth, answering some who argue the position should be rotated around member states.
“It is my sincere wish that the Commonwealth will continue to offer stability and continuity for future generations and will decide that one day the Prince of Wales should carry on the important work started by my father in 1949,” the queen said at the formal opening of the Commonwealth heads of Government Meeting.
The meeting, taking place in Britain for the first time in 20 years, is seen as a chance to reconnect with former British colonies and revitalize the loose alliance of 53 Commonwealth countries ahead of Brexit.
The Commonwealth evolved out of the British empire in the mid-20th century, and the Queen has been its head since her reign began in 1952.
The question of who will follow Britain’s 91 year-old monarch into the role was raised in the run up to the summit. The leader of Britain’s opposition party suggested on Sunday the position should be rotated around the members.
Prime minister Theresa May also spoke at the opening ceremony and paid glowing tribute to the queen’s “service, dedication and constancy” in the role. May will lobby for Charles to be the queen’s successor when the issue is discussed over the next two days.
Prince Charles, 69, also made an informal pitch for the role in his remarks at the event in Buckingham Palace: “For my part, the Commonwealth has been a fundamental feature of my life for as long as I can remember.”


Malawi suffers as US aid cuts cripple health care

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Malawi suffers as US aid cuts cripple health care

LILONGWE: A catastrophic collapse of health care services in Malawi a year after US funding cuts is undoing a decade of progress against HIV/AIDS, providers warn, leaving some of the most vulnerable feeling like “living dead.”
In the impoverished southern Africa country, the US government’s decision to slash foreign aid in January 2025 has led to significant cuts in HIV treatments, a spike in pregnancies and a return to discrimination.
Chisomo Nkwanga, an HIV-positive man who lives in the northern town of Mzuzu, told AFP that the end of US-funded specialized care was like a death sentence.
After his normal provider of life-saving antiretroviral therapy (ART) vanished due to budget cuts, he turned to a public hospital.
“The health care worker shouted at me in front of others,” Nkwanga recalled. “They said, ‘You gay, you are now starting to patronize our hospitals because the whites who supported your evil behavior have stopped?’“
“I gave up,” he said, trembling. “I am a living dead.”
More than one million of aid-dependent Malawi’s roughly 22 million people live with HIV and the United States previously provided 60 percent of its HIV treatment budget.
Globally, researchers estimate that hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths have been caused by the Trump administration’s dismantling of US foreign aid, which has upended humanitarian efforts to fight HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in some of the world’s poorest regions.

- Lay offs, panic -

In Malawi, the drying up of support from USAID and the flagship US anti-HIV program, PEPFAR, has left a “system in panic,” said Gift Trapence, executive director of the Center for the Development of People (CEDEP).
“The funding cut came on such short notice that we couldn’t prepare or engage existing service providers,” Trapence told AFP.
“We had to lay off staff... we closed two drop-in centers and maintained two on skeleton staff,” he said.
“We did this because we knew that if we closed completely, we would be closing everything for the LGBTI community.”
The Family Planning Association of Malawi (FPAM) non-government organization, a cornerstone of rural health care, has been forced to ground the mobile clinics that served as the only medical link for remote villages.
“We had two big grants that were supporting our work, particularly in areas where there were no other service providers,” said executive director Donald Makwakwa.
“We are likely to lose out on all the successes that we have registered over the years,” he said.
A resident of a village once served by FPAM told AFP there had been an explosion in unplanned pregnancies when the family planning provider stopped work.
“I know of nearly 25 girls in my village who got pregnant when FPAM suspended its services here last year,” said Maureen Maseko at a clinic on the brink of collapse.

- Progress undone -

For over a decade, Malawi’s fight against AIDS relied on “peer navigators” and drop-in centers that supported people with HIV and ensured they followed treatment.
With the funding for these services gone, the default rate for people taking the HIV preventative drug PrEP hit 80 percent in districts like Blantyre, according to a report by the CEDEP.
“This is a crisis waiting to happen,” the report quoted former district health care coordinator Fyness Jere as saying.
“When people stop taking PrEP, we increase the chances of new HIV infections... we are undoing a decade of progress in months,” she said.
Trapence noted that without specialized support, thousands of patients had simply disappeared from the medical grid.
“We lost everything, including the structures that were supporting access... treatment and care,” he said.