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Tunis hosts landmark One Health Conference to tackle interconnected health challenges in MENA

Tunis hosts landmark One Health Conference to tackle interconnected health challenges in MENA

Zawya6 days ago

Tunis, Tunisia – The Government of Tunisia will host the MENA Region One Health Conference on June 14–15, 2025, in Tunis, in partnership with the World Bank and the Quadripartite collaboration on One Health comprising the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH).
Over the course of this two-day high-level regional conference, government ministers, health sector experts, development partners, and community representatives will be present to discuss and work together on the issue of collaboration across human, animal, and environmental health. The participants will address the most significant challenges such as antimicrobial resistance (AMR), climate-related health risks, food insecurity, zoonotic diseases, and the urgent need for integrated surveillance systems.
The opening session will feature representatives from the Government of Tunisia and the organizing partners, as well as a high-level ministerial session with participating partner countries.
'This conference is not just an event, but a moment of collective awareness. 'One Health' is no longer a theory; it is a reality we are living and must confront together. The challenges are immense — from pandemics to food security, to antimicrobial resistance — and no individual response can be sufficient. Tunisia is fully committed to this approach and is proud to host this gathering of all those who believe in a united, shared health system, resolutely moving toward the future', said Minister of Health Dr. Moustafa Ferjani.
The conference will feature several sessions on the implementation of One Health around the globe with a special focus on the MENA region. Key interventions will include remarks from Ms. Shobha Shetty, Global Director of the World Bank, Ms. Emmanuelle Soubeyran, WOAH Director General, Dr. Abdulhakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North, and Mr Abdul-Majeid Haddad, Deputy Regional Director of UNEP in West Asia, as well as a recorded message from Dr. Hanan Balkhy, WHO regional director.
'One Health requires breaking down silos and building a shared vision', said Ahmadou Moustapha Ndiaye, Division Director for the Maghreb and Malta at the World Bank. 'The World Bank reaffirms its commitment to supporting Tunisia and partner countries in the region in developing resilient, integrated, and inclusive cross-sectoral systems'.
Dr. Ibrahim EL-ZIQ, WHO Tunisia representative, noted: 'This conference provides an excellent opportunity to accelerate the adoption and operationalization of the 'One Health' approach in the MENA region countries. By meeting here in Tunisia, the various actors are demonstrating their shared determination to act jointly to address complex and interconnected threats to human, animal, and environmental health. Strengthened coordination, constant political commitment and sustainable investment are key to success. We are pleased to join forces with the Tunisian government and the World Bank to co-organize this conference and remain committed to enable countries of the region in transforming this shared vision into concrete action for more resilient and healthier societies'.
The conference agenda features thematic sessions on integrated surveillance, laboratory resilience, conservation and climate, and cross-border collaboration. Practitioners will share real-world applications of One Health, while interactive sessions will offer pathways to mainstream One Health at both policy and operational levels. Highlights include:
The launch of the Carthage Declaration, setting out a regional roadmap to operationalize One Health.
An interactive closing session with the Quadripartite and World Bank representatives outlining next steps and support mechanisms.
The formal launch of a MENA One Health Community of Practice, led by Tunisia's Ministry of Health.
One Health is an integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and optimize the health of people, animals and ecosystems. It recognizes that the health of humans, domestic and wild animals, plants, and the wider environment (including ecosystems) are closely linked and inter-dependent. The approach mobilizes multiple sectors, disciplines and communities at varying levels of society to work together to foster well-being and tackle threats to health and ecosystems, while addressing the collective need for clean water, energy and air, safe and nutritious food, taking action on climate change, and contributing to sustainable development. [1]
Learn more and access the full agenda at:
www.onehealthmena.org

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They avoid directly condemning Israel's repeated violations of international law in these areas, or the increasingly lethal siege that, even last year, saw midwives cutting newborns' umbilical cords with razor blades and tying them off with string from a face mask. The authors include four Israeli doctors and academics, as well as one American former adviser to Israel's Ministry of Health. Not one is Palestinian With no disinfectants, soap or clean water, patients' wounds were left crawling with maggots. It continues: last week, reports circulated on social media that Israel had informed the WHO it was suspending medical coordination for Palestinian boys over the age of 12. Meanwhile, medical evacuations were denied for weeks before Dr Alaa al-Najjar and her surviving child were finally evacuated - along with just 15 other young patients, out of 10,000 in urgent need of evacuation, including more than 4,000 children. So, what is the real purpose of this editorial? A press release from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem makes it plain: it describes the piece as "a strong rebuttal to current calls to isolate Israeli academia and science". It condemns "such boycotts" and "efforts to cut academic ties". Protecting power The editorial's vague reference to "extremist rejection of cooperation and 'normalisation' between Palestinians and Israelis" appears to be a veiled critique of academic boycotts. The boycott called by the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement explicitly targets institutions, not individuals. It is a form of economic and social pressure, inspired by similar academic boycotts of apartheid-era South Africa. And it is a direct response to the complicity of Israeli institutions - from nearly 100 doctors who, in November 2023, publicly called for the bombing of Gaza's hospitals, to the deafening silence, including from the authors of this editorial, as the Israeli military bulldozes every remaining aspect of public health in Gaza. Why is the New England Journal of Medicine promoting 'health bridges' while Gaza's hospitals burn? Read More » The authors of the AJPH editorial include four Israeli doctors and academics, as well as one American former adviser to Israel's Ministry of Health. Not one is Palestinian. Yet the forces driving what they euphemistically call "the tragic example of Gaza" are clear. The overwhelming evidence shows that Israel, with the participation of its healthcare community, has systematically eradicated public health in Gaza. By smoothly evading Israel's unilateral devastation of Gaza's healthcare system - and its literal elimination of those who staff it - the AJPH editorial promotes continued silence among American public health bodies, even as the US actively supports Israel's war. It reads as an attempt to deflect attention from the complicity of Israeli public health in genocide, and to shield Israeli academia from economically significant boycotts and divestment campaigns - even as the world watches 2.3 million people starve before our eyes. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

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