Published

This document is to facilitate the discussions between the PARC-advisers and the representativesof the Commission of the European Union and the Delegation of the EC (Kenya), as outlined in theattached Agenda. In order to ensure the immediate and mid-term sustainability of the ongoingPARC-programme, the following issues - described below, and in detail in the Annexes, andvisualised in the attached Gantt-chart - ought to be addressed (figures are - in most cases - prudentestimates. Dates and durations of projects are approximative):1. CO-ORDINATION:The regional PARC Co-ordination units (Nairobi and Bamako) do urgently need bridging funds tocover the period 1/4/97 to 31/3/99. An amount of 4,5 million ECU is therefore requested (anincludes additional funds 0.73 million ECU to support the Epidemiology component from May '89to April '99). The Communication component will embark on the formulation of a Prodoc. forPhase III to cope with the delays in the implementation of Phase II.2. NATIONAL PARC PROGRAMMES:East-Africa: Apart from Eritrea and Uganda which have just started a new programme, theother countries (Tanzania, Ethiopia, Kenya, Djibouti) do need an urgent revision, evaluation and/orsigning of the project agreement in view of the imminent end of the present phase. Conflict-proneareas as Sudan and Somalia do need provisions for immediate assistance when an improvedsituation would occur, and assistance do deal with the prsent situation, and a relaxation ofadministrative rules for advisers on mission.West & Central Africa: 24 countries are concerned by the PARC programme.One group of 10 countries has a PARC programme running. Three of them (Coted'Ivoire, Mali and Guinee Bissau), however, are to terminate by the end of '97 and '98. The otherremaining 7 countries are covered until the year 2000. As far as these countries are concerned, andpending on their present status, the focus of discussions will be on a) alignment of nationalimplementation with the EU-evaluation report (e.g. stopping vaccinations), b) the formulation of afollow-up PARC programme (e.g. Cote d'Ivoire, Mali and Guinee Bissau). Mali will undergo amid-term evaluation in 1997. Discussion will be held with CAR, Guinee-Conakry, Chad, BurkinaFaso, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal to anticipate the cessation of vaccinations and set-up of aepidemio-surveillance system. The issue of emergency funds is to be tackled urgently.Fourteen countries have no active PARC programme. However, ten among them, receivedPARC-funding in the past (Benin, Burundi, Cameroon, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria,Rwanda and Togo). The EU should give special attention to sonic of them, in view of theirgeographic or strategic location as far as the eradication of Rinderpest (and CBPP) is concerned:Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria and Cameroon, and in Central Africa, Rwanda and Burundi.