Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat

A student reacts as she gets a free anti-typhoid vaccine during the immunisation campaign at a school in Karachi, Pakistan November 20, 2019. (REUTERS)
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Updated 12 October 2025
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Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat

  • Bangladeshi health workers are vaccinating children through schools, community clinics and door-to-door visits, with special attention to urban slums and remote rural areas

DHAKA: Bangladesh launched a nationwide vaccination campaign on Sunday to protect millions of children from typhoid, a deadly and increasingly drug-resistant disease that poses a growing public health threat.
The month-long campaign aims to immunize around 50 million children aged between nine months and 15 years with a single dose of the Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine. Approved and pre-qualified by the World Health Organization, the vaccine provides protection for up to five years and is being administered free under the government’s Expanded Programme on Immunization.
The vaccination push comes amid rising concerns over drug-resistant typhoid strains across South Asia. Since 2016, Pakistan has battled an outbreak resistant to nearly all antibiotics except one.
Bangladeshi health workers are vaccinating children through schools, community clinics and door-to-door visits, with special attention to urban slums and remote rural areas. The drive will continue until November 13, after which TCV will be included in Bangladesh’s routine immunization schedule.
Typhoid is caused by Salmonella Typhi bacteria and spreads through contaminated food and water. It causes fever, nausea, stomach pains and pink spots on the chest, and in severe cases can lead to complications in the gut and head that can be fatal.
Bangladeshi researchers have recently detected ceftriaxone-resistant strains — a troubling sign, as ceftriaxone remains one of the few effective treatments available.
Health experts warn that without urgent preventive measures, resistant strains could make typhoid much harder to treat. Supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the TCV campaign is expected to reduce infections and slow the spread of resistance.

 


Russian army present in six African countries: state TV

Updated 18 November 2025
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Russian army present in six African countries: state TV

  • Russian troops or military instructors have been reported to be additionally deployed in Burkina Faso, Niger, Equatorial Guinea, Central African Republic and Libya
  • The Wagner group was disbanded and restructured after its leader Yevgeny Prigozhin died in a mysterious plane crash in August 2023 following a short-lived mutiny against Moscow

MOSCOW: The Russian army is operating in six African countries, state TV reported in a rare high-profile acknowledgement of the extent of Moscow’s official military presence on the continent.
Facing isolation in the West following its full-scale offensive in Ukraine, Moscow has tried to build new partnerships in Africa, where it has been growing its political, economic and military footprint in recent years.
“Officers and soldiers of the Russian Armed Forces unit are already operating in six African countries,” a state TV correspondent said in a report broadcast Sunday.
Except from Mali, the report did not specify which countries.
Russian troops or military instructors have been reported to be additionally deployed in Burkina Faso, Niger, Equatorial Guinea, Central African Republic and Libya.
The African Corps unit of the Russian defense ministry took over from the Wagner paramilitary group across the continent, diplomatic sources in the Sahel region told AFP in June.
The Wagner group was disbanded and restructured after its leader Yevgeny Prigozhin died in a mysterious plane crash in August 2023 following a short-lived mutiny against Moscow.
Its troops had been fighting in Ukraine and had been deployed across Africa.
The state TV report identified Africa Corps as part of the Russian defense ministry.
It said most of the soldiers deployed were “veterans of the Special Military Operation,” Russia’s term for the war in Ukraine.
In one shot, a flag with insignia resembling the Wagner group’s trademark skull logo could be seen at what the reporter said was a Russian base in Mali.
The video also showed two Russian bombers launching an attack and displayed heavy Russian equipment including helicopters and armored personnel carriers.
Moscow says its forces are helping several African governments repel jihadist insurgencies.