Congo brings forward launch of mpox vaccine drive to Oct 2

Democratic Republic of Congo will start its mpox vaccination campaign on Oct. 2, nearly a week earlier than previously planned, the head of its outbreak response said on Wednesday. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 11 September 2024
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Congo brings forward launch of mpox vaccine drive to Oct 2

  • Congo is the epicenter of the ongoing mpox outbreak that WHO declared to be a global public health emergency last month
  • Health authorities now intend to start the campaign on Oct. 2, response chief Cris Kacita told Reuters

KINSHASA: Democratic Republic of Congo will start its mpox vaccination campaign on Oct. 2, nearly a week earlier than previously planned, the head of its outbreak response said on Wednesday.
Congo is the epicenter of the ongoing mpox outbreak that the World Health Organization declared to be a global public health emergency last month, but a lack of vaccines has until now hampered efforts to curb the spread of the sometimes deadly virus.
The central African country had been planning to launch vaccinations on Oct. 8 after receiving its first delivery of mpox doses last week. But health authorities now intend to start the campaign on Oct. 2, response chief Cris Kacita told Reuters.
“There are procedures that have evolved and helped reduce delays,” he said, adding that the vaccination campaign will last 10 days and target only adults, including health care professionals, park rangers and sex workers in Congo’s six provinces.
He has previously said that work was ongoing to combat mistrust of the vaccine in some communities and to manage the logistical challenge of rolling out the program across six provinces in a country the size of Western Europe.
On Tuesday, Congo received 50,000 mpox vaccine doses that had been donated by the United States, Ambassador Lucy Tamlyn said on X.
Kacita told Reuters that Congo had received in total 265,000 doses from the United States and the European Union.
He said those doses would not be sufficient to cover many areas in the central African country. “There have been promises from France and Belgium, and the number of doses is expected to be known within the week,” Kacita said.
Japan has promised to donate 3.5 million doses of a vaccine that could administered to children, who are among the main victims of the epidemic, he said, adding that discussions were still continuing.


Miami elects first Democratic mayor in nearly three decades

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Miami elects first Democratic mayor in nearly three decades

  • Eileen Higgins received about 60 percent of votes in the runoff election, defeating epublican candidate Emilio T. Gonzalez
WASHINGTON: Miami voters elected Eileen Higgins as the Florida city’s new mayor on Tuesday, making her the first Democrat to hold the office in nearly 30 years.
Higgins received about 60 percent of votes in the runoff election, according to CNN and the Miami Herald newspaper, defeating Emilio T. Gonzalez, a Republican candidate endorsed by President Donald Trump.
Despite winning by a double-digit margin, turnout in the off-year election was low, with only about 20 percent of registered voters participating.
With its high Latino population, Miami politics has been dominated by Republicans of Cuban descent for much of the past three decades.
Trump, who frequently weekends at his Mar-a-Lago Club — located about 107 kilometers north of Miami — won the state of Florida’s electoral votes in 2016, 2020 and 2024.
“Together, we turned the page on years of chaos and corruption and opened the door to a new era for our city — one defined by ethical, accountable leadership that delivers real results for the people,” Higgins said in a statement, according to media reports.
In addition to being the first Democrat to win the Miami mayoral race since the 1990s, Higgins, 61, is the first woman ever elected to the office.
She marks the latest Democratic victory in a sweep of election wins this year, following major state-level races in Virginia and New Jersey and the New York mayoralty.
The string of successful Democratic campaigns is widely interpreted as a rebuke to Trump’s return to power at the start of the year.