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UAE and Gates Foundation launch $500m maternal health fund for Africa

UAE and Gates Foundation launch $500m maternal health fund for Africa
A mother carries her sleeping baby at the Gubio camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria. (AFP/File)
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Updated 29 April 2025

UAE and Gates Foundation launch $500m maternal health fund for Africa

UAE and Gates Foundation launch $500m maternal health fund for Africa
  • Beginnings Fund will help save lives of newborn babies and mothers in sub-Saharan Africa
  • Mohamed Bin Zayed Foundation for Humanity launches the fund in Abu Dhabi

LONDON: A group of philanthropies including the Gates Foundation has set up a fund backed with nearly $500 million to help save the lives of newborn babies and mothers in sub-Saharan Africa, standing out against a bleak global health funding landscape.
The Beginnings Fund was launched on Tuesday in Abu Dhabi, the home of another key backer — the United Arab Emirates’ recently established Mohamed Bin Zayed Foundation for Humanity. The project has been in the works for at least a year. But its role has become more important as governments worldwide follow the US in pulling back from international aid, its chief executive Alice Kang’ethe told Reuters in an interview.
“It is an opportune moment,” she said earlier this month, stressing that the fund aimed to work alongside African governments, experts and organizations rather than parachuting in experts or technologies, an approach she said differed from many traditional donor programs.
“Two generations ago... women in the UAE used to die during childbirth. More than half of children did not survive past childhood,” said Tala Al Ramahi at the Mohamed Bin Zayed Foundation, saying the lessons learned in what worked to change those outcomes would help inform the effort.
The Beginnings Fund aims to save the lives of 300,000 mothers and newborn babies by 2030, and expand quality care for 34 million mothers and babies.
The partners also pledged $100 million in direct investments in maternal and child health, separate to the fund.
It plans to operate in Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Lesotho, Nigeria, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe, focusing on low-cost interventions and personnel in high-burden hospitals. The work will track and target the key reasons babies and mothers die, including infection, severe bleeding for mothers, and respiratory distress for infants. The world has made major progress in reducing newborn and maternal deaths, halving the neonatal mortality rate between 1990 and 2022. But that progress has stagnated or even reversed in nearly all regions in the last few years, according to the World Health Organization, which has warned that aid cuts could make this worse.
“Mothers and newborns should not be dying from causes we know how to prevent,” said Dr. Mekdes Daba, minister of health for Ethiopia, stressing that the majority of deaths are avoidable.
Kang’ethe said the Beginnings Fund, like other philanthropies, was getting calls to fill gaps in global aid funding, but remained focused on its long-term aim of changing the trajectory of mother and newborn survival.
The fund is also backed by the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, Delta Philanthropies and the ELMA Foundation, among others. It will be led from Nairobi, Kenya.


Iraq says senior Islamic State leader killed in Syria

Updated 59 sec ago

Iraq says senior Islamic State leader killed in Syria

Iraq says senior Islamic State leader killed in Syria
(Adds details on identity of commander and his alleged actions)
BAGHDAD, Sept 19 : The Iraqi counterterrorism service said on Friday that a senior Islamic State leader was killed in a security operation in Syria carried out in coordination with the US-led international coalition.
The commander, Omar Abdul Qader Bassam, known as “Abdul Rahman Al-Halabi,” was the group’s head of external operations and security, the service said.
He was accused of overseeing attacks in multiple countries, including the bombing of Iran’s embassy in Lebanon, and planning other operations in Europe and the United States that were ultimately foiled through intelligence work, it added.
US Central Command has carried out a series of strikes targeting Islamic State figures in Syria. US officials have warned the group is hoping to stage a comeback in the country following the fall of Syrian President Bashar Assad last December.
(Reporting by Muayed Hameed; Writing by Jana Choukeir; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Sudanese paramilitary group reportedly kills 43 in mosque drone strike, says a local medical group

Sudanese paramilitary group reportedly kills 43 in mosque drone strike, says a local medical group
Updated 12 min 35 sec ago

Sudanese paramilitary group reportedly kills 43 in mosque drone strike, says a local medical group

Sudanese paramilitary group reportedly kills 43 in mosque drone strike, says a local medical group
  • The Sudan Doctors Network said Friday on X that Muslim worshipers, including older people and children, were killed in a drone strike launched by the Rapid Support Forces, calling it a “heinous crime”

CAIRO: A Sudanese paramilitary group reportedly killed 43 civilians while praying inside a mosque early Friday in the besieged city of El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, said a local medical group.
The Sudan Doctors Network said Friday on X that Muslim worshipers, including older people and children, were killed in a drone strike launched by the Rapid Support Forces, calling it a “heinous crime” against unarmed civilians that showed the group’s “blatant disregard for humanitarian and religious values and international law.”
The Resistance Committees in El Fasher, a group comprised of local citizens from the community that includes human rights activists, who track abuses, posted a video Friday reportedly showing parts of the mosque reduced to rubble with several bodies scattered on the site, now filled with debris. The Associated Press could not independently verify the footage.
No details were shared about the exact location of the mosque, but the latest drone strike is among a series of attacks over the past week as the RSF and the army heavily clashed in El Fasher.
The fight between the army and the RSF escalated in April 2023, erupting into a civil war that has killed at least 40,000 people, according to the World Health Organization, displaced as many as 12 million others and pushed many to the brink of famine. El Fasher has been at the epicenter of fighting for over a year between the two and is the military’s last stronghold in the Darfur region.
Intense fighting on Thursday centered in the western and southern parts of the city, where residents told the Darfur Victims Support Organization, which monitors abuses against civilians, that they heard loud explosions and saw drones being used, according to a statement by the nonprofit.
The Resistance Committee in El Fasher said in a statement Thursday that the RSF targeted several unarmed civilians, including women and older adults, in displacement shelters in the city. The group also said Wednesday heavy artillery by the RSF continuously targeted residential neighborhoods.


‘Netanyahu is f—g me,’ Trump says after Qatar airstrikes: Report

‘Netanyahu is f—g me,’ Trump says after Qatar airstrikes: Report
Updated 21 min 5 sec ago

‘Netanyahu is f—g me,’ Trump says after Qatar airstrikes: Report

‘Netanyahu is f—g me,’ Trump says after Qatar airstrikes: Report
  • Israel has ‘to be very, very careful … Qatar has been a great ally to the US’
  • Hamas negotiators in Doha targeted

LONDON: US President Donald Trump hit out at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for launching airstrikes on Qatar, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Sources told the newspaper that the attack, which targeted Hamas negotiators, left Trump furious, telling US Secretary of State Marco Rubio: “Netanyahu is f—g me.”

Trump added that he was “not happy” with Netanyahu, and that the attack “does not advance Israel or America’s goals.”

It is thought that Israel did not warn the White House in advance of the strikes, and afterward Trump called Netanyahu to make clear his displeasure.

Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said after the attack: “The time has come for the international community to stop using double standards and to punish Israel for all the crimes it has committed.”

Trump said ahead of a state visit by Rubio to Israel earlier this week: “My message is that they (Israel) have to be very, very careful. They have to do something about Hamas, but Qatar has been a great ally to the US.”

During Rubio’s trip, Netanyahu said ties between the US and Israel were “as strong, as durable as the stones in the Western Wall.”


Palestinian authorities arrest suspect over 1982 Paris attack: French prosecutors

Palestinian authorities arrest suspect over 1982 Paris attack: French prosecutors
Updated 19 September 2025

Palestinian authorities arrest suspect over 1982 Paris attack: French prosecutors

Palestinian authorities arrest suspect over 1982 Paris attack: French prosecutors
  • Palestinian authorities have arrested a key suspect in an attack on a Jewish restaurant in Paris which left six people dead in Paris in 1982, French prosecutors said on Friday

PARIS: Palestinian authorities have arrested a key suspect in an attack on a Jewish restaurant in Paris which left six people dead in Paris in 1982, French prosecutors said on Friday.
The office of the France anti-terror prosecutor said it was informed by Interpol of the arrest of Hicham Harb, welcoming “this major procedural breakthrough” and thanking the Palestinian authorities for their cooperation.
Harb, now 70, who is suspected of leading the attackers in the gun assault on the Jo Goldenberg restaurant in the heart of Paris, was arrested in the occupied West Bank, according to the Le Parisien daily, which first reported the arrest.


Israel army to use ‘unprecedented force’ in Gaza City

Israel army to use ‘unprecedented force’ in Gaza City
Updated 19 September 2025

Israel army to use ‘unprecedented force’ in Gaza City

Israel army to use ‘unprecedented force’ in Gaza City
  • Israeli military spokesperson urges residents to flee southwards while announcing the closure of a temporary evacuation route opened 48 hours earlier

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: The Israeli military warned on Friday it will operate with “unprecedented force” in Gaza City, urging residents to flee southwards while announcing the closure of a temporary evacuation route opened 48 hours earlier.

Israel’s bid to capture Gaza City has sparked international outrage, with the territory already devastated by nearly two years of war and gripped by a UN-declared famine.

It comes ahead of a planned move by several Western countries, including France and Britain, to recognize a Palestinian state next week at a UN summit.

The United Nations estimated at the end of August that about one million people were living in Gaza City and its surroundings. Israel says hundreds of thousands of them have fled the Gaza Strip’s largest city.

In a post on X addressing residents of Gaza City, the military’s Arabic-language spokesman, Avichay Adraee, said: “From this moment, Salah Al-Din Road is closed for southbound travel. The Israel Defense Forces will continue to operate with unprecedented force against Hamas and other terrorist organizations.”

He added the only possible route south was via Al-Rashid street and urged residents to “take this opportunity and join the hundreds of thousands of city residents who have moved south to the humanitarian area.”

Israel on Wednesday announced a “temporary” new route for residents to flee Gaza City, after it launched an intense ground offensive and massive bombardment of the Palestinian territory’s main city after nearly two years of devastating war.

The military had said the transportation route via Salah Al-Din street would remain open for just 48 hours from midday (0900 GMT).

Salah Al-Din street is the main north-south road through the Gaza Strip.

The US-backed offensive on Gaza City began on Tuesday and came as a United Nations probe accused Israel of committing “genocide” in the Gaza Strip, saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other senior officials had incited the crime.

Israel rejected the findings and slammed it as “distorted and false.”

‘We have lost everything’

AFP footage from the Al-Rashid coastal road on Thursday showed long lines of Palestinians heading south on foot or in vehicles piled high with meagre belongings.

In western Gaza City on Friday, displaced Palestinian Sami Baroud described “relentless and intense shelling.”

“Our life has become nothing but explosions and danger,” the 35-year-old told AFP by telephone.

“We have lost everything – our lives, our future, our sense of safety. How can I evacuate when I can’t even afford transportation?”

Umm Mohammed Al-Hattab, 49, also said her family had nowhere to go and couldn’t afford the cost of moving.

“My seven children and I are still living in tents in western Gaza City after (Israel) bombed our home,” she said.

“The bombing hasn’t stopped, and at any moment, we expect a missile to fall on us. My children are terrified, and I don’t know what to do,” she said.

Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel which sparked the war resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 65,141 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.