Technical assistance contract.

Rinderpest was first introduced to the African continent in 1841 and it first appeared south of tSahara in 1884, after infected cattle were imported from India. The resulting epidemic killed ov90% of the indigenous cattle and wildlife population in Sub-Saharan Africa and up to 75%Egyptian cattle and buffaloes.During the 1960s and 1970s, the Joint Project Campaign (JP15) resulted in the vaccination of ov70 million cattle with the tissue culture vaccine. The JP15 campaign ended in 1969 and 1976West Africa and East Africa, respectively; by this time, the number of rinderpest outbreaks 11dropped substantially. As it became clear that rinderpest was spreading once again throughoAfrica, OAU/IBAR expressed its concern for the need to renew control efforts. After wide-rangiiconsultations between national governments and donors, especially the European Communities, tiPan-African Rinderpest Campaign (PARC) was officially launched as a continent-wide contrcampaign.The Pan-African Rinderpest Campaign (PARC) was financed from 1986 by the European Union,principally through Regional and National Programmes of the European Development Fund (EDF).It consisted of two parts: one part supported the Interafrican Bureau for Animal Resources (IBAR)the Organisation of African Unity (OAU ), which was responsible for the co-ordination of theproject; the other part was a collection of programmes at a national level which were negotiated oncase by case basis with individual countries. In total, 35 countries from West, Central and EastAfrica were involved in the PARC programme under various funding agreements.The aim of the programme was to :(i) control and ultimately eradicate rinderpest from the continent ;(ii) revitalize and restructure livestock services, through dialogue with nationgovernments, to make them self-sustaining ;and(iii) provide appropriate improvments to husbandry methods.By 1999, more than 12 years after PARC started, 465 5 million doses of rinderpest vaccine had beeused and no rinderpest has been reported in West and Central Africa for more than ten years. T1]number of countries officially known to harbour rinderpest or to be suspected to have unreportecases dropped from 18 in 1986 (when PARC started) to just two in 1998.By 1999, seventeen countries had declared complete or zonal provisional freedom from rinderpest accordingto the OIE pathway. There was also significant progress on policy reforms and privatization of animalhealth services: 23 of the 35 countries have adopted cost recovery measures while in 20 countries, someform ofprivatization was initiated, including the use of community-based delivery systems of veterinar services. An economic impact assessment of PARC showed that rinderpest is a disease of major economic importance in the African continent.