Audio By Carbonatix
Zimbabwe has rejected a US health deal that would have provided $367m (£272m) in funding over five years because of Washington's demand for sensitive data.
The decision has come to light after a government memo from December was leaked, revealing that President Emmerson Mnangagwa felt the deal was "lopsided".
A government spokesman has since explained the US was demanding access to biological samples for research and commercial gain, but said it was not willing to share the benefits for future vaccines and treatments.
"We will now turn to the difficult and regrettable task of winding down our health assistance in Zimbabwe," US Ambassador to Zimbabwe Pamela Tremont said in a statement.
Her embassy said the US had provided more than $1.9bn in health funding to Zimbabwe over the last two decades.
In December, Kenya's High Court suspended a similar health funding agreement the government had signed with the US after a consumer rights lobby filed a case citing concerns about the safety of Kenyans' health data.
Since returning to office last year, US President Donald Trump has slashed foreign aid and closed the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
The agency had administered aid for the US government, but Trump argued its spending was "wasteful" and his administration was pursing government-to-government deals to boost transparency and accountability.
According to the US embassy in Zimbabwe, 16 African countries have so far signed health pacts representing more than $18.3bn in new funding.
It said the money for Zimbabwe would have gone towards "HIV/Aids treatment and prevention, tuberculosis, malaria, maternal and child health, and disease outbreak preparedness".
"We believe this collaboration would have delivered extraordinary benefits for Zimbabwean communities especially the 1.2 million men, women and children currently receiving HIV treatment through US-supported programmes," Tremont said.
But government spokesperson Nick Mangwana said the arrangement was "asymmetrical".
"Zimbabwe was being asked to share its biological resources and data over an extended period, with no corresponding guarantee of access to any medical innovations - such as vaccines, diagnostics, or treatments - that might result from that shared data," his statement said.
"In essence, our nation would provide the raw materials for scientific discovery without any assurance that the end products would be accessible to our people should a future health crisis emerge."
He also said the US's withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO) and its pursuit of bilateral health agreements were upending structures already set up through the global health agency.
Mangwana gave as an example its Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing scheme to deal with future pandemics.
"This system is designed to ensure that when a country contributes its data, the benefits - including vaccines and treatments - are shared equitably, not commercialised exclusively by those with the resources to develop them."
Zimbabwe's reservations over the US deal "should not be misconstrued as anti-American sentiment", he added.
"We welcome continued dialogue with our American counterparts on how future co-operation might be structured in a manner that respects the sovereignty and dignity of both nations."
Latest Stories
-
Cambridge conference spotlights future-ready education in Africa
13 seconds -
Sam George calls for trust-driven, inclusive banking at Connected Banking Summit
3 minutes -
Ghana targets 15-month import buffer with GANRAP
11 minutes -
Ghana’s democracy is speaking; Are we listening?
14 minutes -
Government targets 127 tonnes of small-scale gold yearly under new reserves policy
25 minutes -
No-bed syndrome more of attitudinal issues exhibited by healthcare providers – Abuakwa South MP
29 minutes -
Ramaphosa thanks Putin for release of South Africans lured into Russia-Ukraine war
41 minutes -
No indisciplined students will be pampered – Education Ministry warns
1 hour -
GIABA conducts on-site evaluation of Ghana’s anti-money laundering and CFT regime
1 hour -
CIHRM to enforce strict compliance with HR standards and regulations
1 hour -
Illegal mining in forest reserves increase to 8,923.8 hectares in 2024 – Survey
1 hour -
Police uncovers suspected cannabis worth over GH₵1.4m in an impounded truck
1 hour -
Nkenkaasu SHS Senior Housemaster suspended over alleged misconduct
1 hour -
Government targets 70% 5G coverage by 2027
1 hour -
Zimbabwe rejects ‘lopsided’ US health aid deal over data concerns
1 hour
