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» 27.10.2008 - Pope to visit Cameroon and Angola next year
» 17.10.2008 - $6.4 Million for rural agricultural project in Angola
» 29.08.2008 - Over 400,000 Angolan refugees return home
» 13.08.2008 - Angola's fair vote under threat
» 01.08.2008 - Angola approves model ballot paper
» 24.08.2007 - Angola attains high economic growth
» 30.03.2006 - Angola slammed over forced evictions
» 19.07.2003 - Angola approves new social protection act

Angola
Society

Efforts to improve Angola's social services

afrol News, 24 June - The Angolan government is trying to revitalise health, education and social services in the country, 15 months after a ceasefire ended three decades of civil war that destroyed 60 percent of all hospitals and 5,000 schools. Several organisations and UN agencies are supporting the government efforts.

Sixty percent of Angola's children suffer from chronic malnutrition and 45 percent do not go to school. UN agencies and development bodies such as the World Bank agree that investment in the country, coupled with effective partnerships, will yield rewards for Angolans.

Angola took a significant step on its long road to recovery when it partnered with the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) for a national campaign to protect children from measles, a highly contagious disease that kills more young Angolans than any other preventable ailment, the UN reports today.

Some 7.1 million children - 92 percent of the population aged 9 months to 15 years - were vaccinated during the National Measles Campaign, which ended on 31 May. UNICEF estimates that 70,000 child lives and US$ 16.8 million in medical costs will now be saved.

UNICEF is also supporting the "Back to School" initiative, the country's biggest education campaign to date, which has benefited 500,000 children. In addition, the Angolan government has announced funding for a further 29,000 teachers across the country.

- This remains a decisive time in Angola with much to do, UNICEF Representative Mario Ferrari said. "Social services were basically wiped out here, hundreds of thousands of Angolans are returning home, and many challenges remain in achieving universal education and routine immunisation," he added.

Assisting with the repatriation of Angolans abroad, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) last Friday relocated the first group of 543 refugees from Congo Kinshasa (DRC). The agency is providing food and a package of domestic items, including blankets, kitchen sets and plastic sheeting to the returnees.

A second repatriation convoy of Angolan refugees is due to leave Tuesday from Kilueka and Nkondo camps in Bas-Congo Province. UNHCR in Katanga has received 16 additional trucks, which will allow the agency to gradually increase the number of refugees on each convoy.


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