Rinderpest Eradication Strategy Workshop for Southern Sudan 1st 2nd August 2001 Nairobi..PDF

The Rinderpest Eradication Strategy Workshop for Southern Sudan 1-2ndAugust 2001 was organisedby VSF-Belgium for the Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS) Southern Sector Livestock Programmeunder the co-ordination of the Pan African Programme for the Control of Epizootics (PACE), OAUIBAR, and funded by the Community-based Animal Health and Participatory Epidemiology Unit(CAPE) of PACE.The aim of the workshop was to present the new strategy for the last stage of rinderpest eradicationfrom Sudan to the organisations involved in livestock activities in OLS Southern Sector. Participantsincluded representatives from OAU-IBAR PACE Programme, FAO-OLS, NGOs and counterpartsfrom both southern and northern sectors.Presentations were made on the global status of rinderpest and strategy for eradication, the currentrinderpest status of Sudan, the new rinderpest eradication strategy for Sudan, rinderpest surveillance,vaccination policy, emergency response, and raising awareness of the new strategy. The participantsidentified the roles and responsibilities of stakeholders in the new strategy and developed one-yearaction plans for its implementation.The strategy can be summarized as follows: Sudan is divided into three epidemiological zones; theprovisionally free zone, the surveillance zone, and the infected zone. These zones will becomeeffective from 1/1/02. Activities to be carried out in the infected zone are; targeted vaccinationcampaigns in selected communities to be completed by 30/6/02, all other mass vaccination activitiesto be completed by 31/12/01, intensive active and purposive surveillance, and the control of anyconfirmed rinderpest outbreaks. Activities to be carried out in the surveillance zone are; all massvaccination to have ceased by 31/12/01, intensive active and purposive surveillance, and the controlof any confirmed rinderpest outbreaks. Activities in the provisionally free zone are; all massvaccination to have ceased by 31/12/01, routine surveillance, and the control of any confirmedrinderpest outbreaks.The participants raised some concerns in relation to the implementation of this strategy that included;availability of funding to implement, adequate laboratory support for surveillance, short timeframe tointroduce the strategy, emergency response capacity, access and security to implement fully, and therole and remuneration of community-based animal health workers.The main action points arising out of the workshop were to:• Prepare a document describing the strategy — PACE• Present the strategy document to counterparts for their endorsement and distribution to field levelcounterparts to promote their participation — PACE/FAO-OLSNSF-B• Distribute the strategy document to NGOs to support project proposals and inform donors — FAOOLS/VSF-B• Preparation of communication materials and carry out community dialogue on new strategy —NG0s/counterpartsNSF-B• CAHW training in new strategy — NGOs/counterparts with VSF-B support• Training of AHAs, SPs, field vets in new strategy — NGOs with VSF-B support• Complete mass vaccination by end 2001 and return balance of vaccine — CAHWs, AHAs, SPs• Surveillance — CAHWs, AHAs, SPs, field vets• Cold chain maintenance — NGOs• Planning for emergency response — NGOs/VSF-B/FAO-OLS with PACE support • Livestock Co-ordination Meeting 15-19thOctober Lokichokio — introduce new strategy, reviewprogress — VSF-B, PACE• Infected zone strategy meeting 20-21' October Lokichokio -- all agencies and counterparts activein zone + VSF-B, FAO-OLS and PACE• Proposal writing — NGOs• Preparation and distribution of workshop minutes — VSF-B• Targeted vaccination; Pibor, Kapoeta, Riwoto, Lafon — northern sector, Nyangatom — FAO-OLS,Toposa — DOT, Bor Dinka and Murle — ACROSS.• Seek donor for Boma CBAHP •— FAO-OLS