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Iran declares Hormuz strait closed, US military insists traffic flowing
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McCullum sacked as England Test coach but retains white-ball role
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Marc Marquez cruises to Germany MotoGP victory, enters title race
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Bhatia first woman to score Lord's Test century as India run riot
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Mladenovic and Guo win Wimbledon women's doubles title
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'Insane heat': Durbridge calls for earlier Tour de France starts
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McCullum stands down as England Test cricket coach
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McCullum stand downs as England Test cricket coach
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Marc Marquez cruises to Germany MotoGP Grand Prix victory
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India's Bhatia becomes first woman to score Lord's Test century
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Ukraine's Zelensky orders government reshuffle, new PM
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India's Bhatia in sight of becoming first woman to score Lord's Test century
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Iran, US trade more strikes as fighting escalates
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Нуша Аубель і Потсдам: довіра втрачена
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Noosha Aubel and Potsdam: The trust placed in her has been squandered
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努莎·奧貝爾與波茨坦:先前的信任已蕩然無存
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US senator and Trump ally Lindsey Graham dies aged 71
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Evacuees allowed to return home after deadly wildfire in Spain stabilises
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US-Iran strikes: latest developments
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Senegal part ways with coach Thiaw after World Cup exit
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South Korea issues first emergency heatwave warning under new rating system
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McGregor 'destroyed' in 69 seconds on UFC return from five-year layoff
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US senator and Trump ally Lindsey Graham dies age 71
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Hundreds return home as deadly Spain wildfire nears control
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England, Argentina to renew bitter rivalry in World Cup semi-final
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Argentina's Scaloni says England World Cup semi 'just a football game'
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McGregor loses in 69 seconds on UFC return from five-year layoff
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Iran strikes Gulf neighbours after new US attacks
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Car crisis takes toll on Germany's young engineers
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England, Argentina set up World Cup showdown after quarter-final wins
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Argentina sink 10-man Swiss to set up blockbuster England World Cup semi-final
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Political violence shadows Bangladesh's new government
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West Afghanistan female dress-code crackdown hits businesses
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'We put Norway on the map', says Haaland after World Cup exit
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Bhutan battles 'existential' population crisis with birth drive
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Tuchel says 'lucky' England must improve despite reaching World Cup semi-finals
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Norway coach says ball hit camera cable for crucial England goal
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'Never in doubt': England fans dare to dream after quarter-final scare
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Growing list of countries move to ban social media for children
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Till death do us bark: Pets serve as witnesses at Ecuador weddings
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Schmidt aims to leave Wallabies 'in good order' for incoming Kiss
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Typhoon makes landfall in China, downgraded to severe tropical storm
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Rennie says All Blacks must improve with 'smart' Ireland awaiting
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US launches new strikes on Iran after container ship hit in Hormuz
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Eddie Jones says 'pretty obvious' Japan on right track
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Bellingham double as 'lucky' England beat Norway to reach World Cup semi-finals
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Bellingham heroics edge England past Norway and into World Cup semis
US aid cuts come at deadly moment for malaria control
The sudden freezing of US aid to malaria projects comes as deadly new variants are spreading in Africa and could have a devastating impact, the head of a major NGO told AFP.
The US government has provided some 40 percent of the annual funding globally for control and research into a disease that causes more than 600,000 deaths from 250 million cases each year -- mostly in Africa.
That funding, of up to $1 billion a year, is now frozen as part of President Donald Trump's plan to axe foreign aid.
"We did try to anticipate in advance of this, but I think even our worst case scenarios have been surpassed," said James Tibenderana, chief executive of the London-based Malaria Consortium that runs projects around the world.
The Malaria Consortium has already been forced to fire staff working on a programme in Mozambique and halt a programme in Asia training people to monitor and control mosquitoes.
Only five percent of its funding comes from the US government, but Tibenderana said US cuts would hit the entire sector.
"It's just so disruptive, so sudden," he said.
He highlighted that it came at a moment when the first signs of drug- and insecticide-resistance had started to emerge.
"The clock is ticking for drug resistance in Africa," he said.
"The early signs of resistance to the artemisinin-based combination therapy medicine, which is the mainstay of treatment for malaria, are emerging."
He pointed to reports from Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda.
US-funded organisations have been the major player in monitoring this emergence through genome-mapping and drug-effectiveness studies.
Without them, it will be "hard to detect at the scale that was possible with US government funding", said Tibenderana.
- 'Through the woodchipper' -
It also comes as an invasive mosquito species from Asia -- Anopheles stephensi -- has started spreading in East Africa.
It thrives in urban areas and is immune to insecticide, potentially putting an additional 126 million people in Africa's cities at risk of malaria, according to one 2020 study.
"The invasion and spread of Anopheles stephensi has the potential to change the malaria landscape in Africa and reverse decades of progress we've made towards malaria control," Meera Venkatesan, who was then malaria division chief for USAID, told AFP in November.
Her division has now been shuttered along with the rest of USAID by Trump, with his billionaire ally Elon Musk boasting this week that he had put the vast humanitarian agency "through the woodchipper".
Funding cuts will hit supply chains, rural hospitals and programmes to buy the latest mosquito nets.
They will force poor families into debt when they need to send their children to hospital, said Tibenderana.
Children under five account for around 80 percent of malaria deaths in Africa, according to the World Health Organization.
Tibenderana hoped other governments and institutions such as the World Bank will step in, though he knows resources are scarce.
He compared the US funding freezing to the recent pandemic.
"We have to respond as we did with the Covid-19 pandemic, where there was a threat and people stepped up," he said.
"But the suddenness of this is huge."
K.AbuDahab--SF-PST