Bringing Africa Back to Life: The Legacy of George W. Bush. By Jim Landers
Dallas Morning News
June 08, 2012
LUSAKA, Zambia — On a beautiful Saturday morning, Delfi Nyankombe
stood among her bracelets and necklaces at a churchyard bazaar and
pondered a question: What do you think of George W. Bush?
“George Bush is a great man,” she answered. “He tried to help poor
countries like Zambia when we were really hurting from AIDS. He
empowered us, especially women, when the number of people dying was
frightening. Now we are able to live.”
Nyankombe, 38, is a mother of three girls. She also admires the
former president because of his current campaign to corral cervical
cancer. Few are screened for the disease, and it now kills more Zambian
women than any other cancer.
“By the time a woman knows, she may need radiation or chemotherapy
that can have awful side effects, like fistula,” she said. “This is a
big problem in Zambia, and he’s still helping us.”
The debate over a president’s legacy lasts many years longer than his
term of office. At home, there’s still no consensus about the 2001-09
record of George W. Bush, with its wars and economic turmoil.
In Africa, he’s a hero.
“No American president has done more for Africa,” said Festus Mogae,
who served as president of Botswana from 1998 to 2008. “It’s not only me
saying that. All of my colleagues agree.”
AIDS was an inferno burning through sub-Saharan Africa. The American
people, led by Bush, checked that fire and saved millions of lives.
People with immune systems badly weakened by HIV were given
anti-retroviral drugs that stopped the progression of the disease.
Mothers and newborns were given drugs that stopped the transmission of
the virus from one generation to the next. Clinics were built. Doctors
and nurses and lay workers were trained. A wrenching cultural
conversation about sexual practices broadened, fueled by American money
promoting abstinence, fidelity and the use of condoms.
“We kept this country from falling off the edge of a cliff,” said
Mark Storella, the U.S. ambassador to Zambia. “We’ve saved hundreds of
thousands of lives. We’ve assisted over a million orphans. We’ve created
a partnership with Zambia that gives us the possibility of walking the
path to an AIDS-free generation. This is an enormous achievement.”
Bush remains active in African health. Last September, he launched a
new program — dubbed Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon — to tackle cervical and
breast cancer among African women. The program has 14 co-sponsors,
including the Obama administration.
Read the rest here: http://www.bushcenter.com/blog/2012/06/11/icymi-bringing-africa-back-to-life-the-legacy-of-george-w-bush
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