Programme Activity

Animal Health

Concluded projects
Pan-African Programme for the Control of Epizootics PACE
Farming in Tsetse Controlled Areas FITCA
Regional Action for Livestock Production in Eastern Africa RALEA
FAO Regional Technical Cooperation Project RTCP

Current projects
Somali Ecosystem Rinderpest Eradication Coordination Unit SERECU
Vaccines for the Control of Neglected Animal Diseases in Africa VACNADA
Livestock Emergency Intervention to Mitigate Food Crisis in Somalia LEISOM

Avian Influenza Platform Avian Influenza
Support Programme to Integrated National Action Plans for Avian and Human Influenza SPINAP
Emergency Relief Support to Combat Avian influenza ERSCA
Early Detection, Reporting and Surveillance - Avian Influenza in Africa EDRSAIA

ISCTRC
International Scientific Council for Trypanosomiasis Research and Control ISCTRC Council

ALive Platform
African Partnership for Livestock Development, Poverty Alleviation & Sustainable Growth ALive Secretariat

Animal Production

Dryland Livestock Wildlife Environment Interface Project DLWEIP
Livestock for Livelihoods: Strengthening Climate Change Adaptation Strategies through Improved Management at the Livestock-Wildlife-Environment Interface LIVELIHOODS
North Eastern Pastoral Development Programme NEPDP

Trade & Marketing

Participation of African Nations in Sanitary and Phytosanitary Standard-setting Organisations PAN-SPSO
Somali Livestock Certification Project SOLICEP
Regions of Origin Programme RoOP

IBAR Publications

Pan African Animal Health Yearbook Pan African Animal Health Yearbook
Bulletin of Animal Health and Production in Africa Bulletin of Animal Health and Production in Africa

Animal Resources Information System 2 Animal Resources Information System

 

Farming in Tsetse Controlled Areas

Background

Farming in Tsetse Controlled Areas (FITCA) is a regional rural development programme composed of four projects at country level in Eastern Africa, namely, Ethiopia, Kenya Uganda and Tanzania. Funds for Rwanda and Burundi were budgeted under the Regional Component. The programme became operational in 1999 and came to an end in all countries apart from Uganda in December 2004.

The emphasis of the programme has been different in each of the countries. In Ethiopia the project was primarily a capacity building programme with an emphasis on training of government personnel. In Uganda the project initially emphasised traditional approaches to tsetse control using the relevant government departments at district level. Districts affected by sleeping sickness were the target. Latterly the Uganda project has focused on better farming and land use practices; the emphasis indicated in the project title. Attempts are now being made to involve the private sector and NGOs. In Kenya, the starting premise was that the government no longer had the capacity to implement tsetse control and thus efforts were made to encourage farmer-based tsetse control methods and to involve the communities and the private sector from the outset. In Tanzania two private consultancy companies were the implementing agencies for two community based projects with an emphasis on farmer-based tsetse control methods.

The programme included an Environmental Monitoring and Management Component (EMMC) to ensure that any changes resulting from the programme were environmentally sound and sustainable. Work on this aspect of the programme is continuing at the International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi.

Funding of 20 million EURO was provided by the European Development Fund from the Regional Indicative Programme (RIP) as well as from the respective National Indicative Programmes (NIPs) . The actual amounts spent on coordination at AU/IBAR and regional activities in addition to activities in the participating countries are as follows (approx):

Regional (Incl EMMC) Euro 2,887,789
Ethiopia: Euro 2,147,320
Kenya: Euro 3,636,524
Tanzania: Euro 501,273
Uganda: Euro 4,330,082
TOTAL: Euro 13,502,989

Challenges
The African trypanosomiases consist of several diseases affecting man and his livestock. Trypanosomes (the causative parasites) are transmitted amongst humans, domestic animals and wild vertebrate hosts by over 20 different species of tsetse flies. This disease complex has influenced human development throughout an extensive area of Africa for centuries, determining what areas could be settled – precluding human occupation of some while leading to overpopulation and desertification of others. The human disease, sleeping sickness, occurs in 36 countries and the livestock disease is a major constraint to agriculture production in over 10 million square kilometres.

Long-term-Aim of the programme

Poverty alleviation; Community-based tsetse control using appropriate and low cost technology and Constant and continuous survey and monitoring of tsetse populations by the public veterinary services.

Expected Results

Increased livestock productivity; Improved human health; Increased agricultural production and Sustainable control and management of tsetse populations.

 

FITCA Information

Background

Main achievements

Ethiopia
Kenya
Tanzania
Uganda

Documents

FITCA Kenya Lessons Learned

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