A child receives polio vaccine. [File, Standard]Kenya has emerged as the pacesetter in a growing continental revolt against the terms of a major health financing deal with the United States, with Zimbabwe and Zambia now following suit by suspending or rejecting similar agreements over concerns about sovereignty and data sharing. What was marketed by Washington as a return to the basics of global health assistance—emphasising shared responsibility and clearer rules—has hit a wall of resistance in Africa, where governments are increasingly scrutinising the fine print attached to billions of shillings in aid. The new approach, which seeks to link health funding to access to strategic minerals and pathogen data, is facing its stiffest test in Africa.


Source:   Standard Digital
March 03, 2026 07:16 UTC