Arusha — Training
courses have commenced at East Africa's eight international airports on
prevention of Covid-19 ahead of resumption of flight schedules as the
region is cautiously easing
travel restrictions.
The first training
got under way on Wednesday at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport
(JKIA) in Nairobi. Similar training courses will follow in Dar es
Salaam, Mombasa, Entebbe, Juba, Bujumbura and Kigali, the East African
Community (EAC) secretariat said in a statement yesterday.
The Abeid Amani
Karume International Airport in Zanzibar is believed to be among the
eight designated airports though not mentioned in the dispatch. The
Civil Aviation Safety and Security Oversight Agency (Cassoa), an
institution of the community, is coordinating the exercise.
The emergency of
Covid-19 intervention trainings are being implemented by Amref Flying
Doctors, a Nairobi-based leading international health NGO.
Cassoa executive
director Emile Nguza Arao said the training will involve staff from the
civil aviation authorities and those from the allied sectors.
They are airline
operators, port health, animal health, immigration, customs, cargo and
clearance and airport security and others.
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"It will strengthen surveillance, building robust early warning systems and coordinating public health responses," he said.
This, he observed,
will help pre-vent, detect and respond to the Covid-19 outbreak and that
a total of 240 key airport personnel from the eight airports will be
involved.
The trainings
implement parts of the EAC Covid-19 Response Plan. It is facilitated by
the German government which has offered millions of euros. EAC recently
described airports as 'high risk areas' for the spread of highly
infectious diseases such as Covid-19.
With the initial
corona-virus cases into the region having been 'imported' from abroad,
air-ports have been blamed for having facilitated its rapid spread.
Official statistics on EAC web-site indicate Covid-19 confirmed cases in
the region are 3,146 with no deaths reported in Rwanda and Uganda.
Until Wednesday this week, Kenya had 1,348 cases, South Sudan 655, Tanzania 509, Uganda 253, Rwanda 339 and Burundi 42.
One of the key
interventions to slow the spread of the disease under the EAC Covid-19
Response Plan is to strengthen surveillance at the border points.
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