WFP Begins COVID-19 Materials Flight to 130 Countries as Nigeria Records 68 Deaths, 2170 Positive Cases

FILE PHOTO: The ultrastructural morphology exhibited by the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV), which was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China, is seen in an illustration released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. January 29, 2020. Alissa Eckert, MS; Dan Higgins, MAM/CDC/Handout via REUTERS.

Over the next six weeks, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) is expecting to transport an equivalent of 37 Boeing 747 planeloads from China and Malaysia to 130 countries around the world. 

Once the service is fully up and running, as many as 350 cargoes and another 350 passenger flights could fly every month. 

This is because the UN agency is setting up a logistics backbone for global COVID-19 efforts. 

This is happening as Nigeria’s zooming tally raced to 2,170 confirmed positive cases on Friday.

Founder of DAAR Communications Plc, Raymond Dokpesi, and some of his family members contributed in sign-posting the COVID-19 pandemic space in the country.

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) says Nigeria on Friday, recorded another all-time high number of 238 new cases with 10 deaths.

With no new state reporting a case in the last 24 hours, 351 cases were successfully treated and discharged from the various isolation centres across the country.

Sadly, while NCDC says the number of deaths recorded has risen to 68 in 34 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, it said the 238 new cases came from 22 states.

Kano again took the lead with 92 cases, followed by Abuja and Lagos State with 36 and 30 cases respectively.

Others are Gombe 16, Bauchi 10, Delta eight, Oyo six, Zamfara and Sokoto five each, Ondo and Nasarawa four each, Kwara, Edo, Ekiti, Borno and Yobe three each, Adamawa two, Niger, Imo, Ebonyi, Rivers and Enugu one each.

WFP is rolling out a global hub-and-spokes system of air links to dispatch vital medical and humanitarian cargo and transport health workers to the front lines of the pandemic. 

Global Humanitarian Response Hubs located close to where medical supplies are manufactured in Liège, Dubai, and China will link to regional hubs in Ethiopia, Ghana, Malaysia, Panama, Dubai, and South Africa, where a fleet of smaller aircraft will be on standby to move cargo and personnel into priority countries. 

The network builds on pre-existing UN Humanitarian Response Depots (UNHRD) – including Brindisi in Italy.

The network of global logistics hubs will support the entire aid community, and ensure the delivery of vital medical and humanitarian supplies to developing countries at a time when commercial air transport is at a virtual standstill.

WFP’s COVID-19 Response Director, Amer Daoudi, says “the window of opportunity to surge medical and humanitarian equipment into Africa to curb the pandemic is closing fast.

“Our global logistics support system is up-and-running, and this delivery marks the first of many cargo shipments we will fly to all corners of the globe.”

Already, a WFP-contracted Boeing 757 cargo flight departed the newly-established Global Humanitarian Response Hub in Liège, Belgium, late on Thursday carrying almost 16 metric tons of medical cargo and personal protective equipment like masks and gloves on behalf of UNICEF and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) destined for Burkina Faso and Ghana. 

Some of this cargo will then be moved to its final destination in the Republic of Congo.

While this flight is the first from the new hub in Liège, WFP has dispatched more than 300 metric tons of humanitarian and medical cargo to 89 countries, since late January, supporting governments and health partners in their response to COVID-19. 

These shipments include masks, gloves, ventilators, testing kits and thermometers.

Aid agencies and health authorities have been struggling to get supplies to fragile settings. They are hindered by the breakdown of global supply chains, the collapse of commercial air travel, border closures, and disruptions to shipping. 

WFP’s logistics network will bridge the gap in essential services, ensuring humanitarian and health responders on the frontlines of the pandemic can stay and deliver lifesaving assistance.

WFP is also mounting a regional passenger air service to ferry humanitarian and health workers across East and West Africa to overcome disruptions to commercial air services, with the first flights expected in coming days. 

The service will be expanded to the Middle East, Latin America and Asia soon. WFP also stands ready to set up air links with Geneva and Rome if commercial services are disrupted.

“To put it simply – without our logistics support, the response to COVID-19 in the world’s most fragile settings would stutter to a halt, leaving millions at risk”, Daoudi adds.

Meanwhile, WFP appealed for an initial $350 million to kick-start global common logistics services, a call echoed by humanitarian partners in April, who highlighted the urgency of these vital WFP-led efforts.

 

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