IAEA to provide cancer care in Africa

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has launched a new initiative aimed at providing cancer care for people living in low and middle-income countries in Africa.
The initiative, dubbed
"Rays of Hope," was officially launched at on the occasion of World
Cancer Day on Friday at an event held on the sidelines of the 35th African
Union (AU) Summit at the AU Headquarters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.
Moussa Faki Mahamat,
chairperson of the AU Commission; Felix Tshisekedi, president of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo and current chairperson of the African Union; and Macky
Sall, president of Senegal and incoming AU chair, co-hosted the launch event.
Launching the
initiative, Director-General of the IAEA Rafael Mariano Grossi said the
"Rays of Hope" will work to tackle the burden of cancer in Africa by
expanding radiotherapy especially in member states where radiation treatment is
absent.
"I would like to
thank the International Atomic Energy Agency for its commitment for our fight
against cancer across the continent through strengthening member states'
capacities in radiotherapy to ensure proper care," Tshisekedi, chairperson
of the 55-member pan-African bloc said.
Speaking on the occasion, Senegalese President Sall said that cancer causes 700,000 deaths every year in Africa, a continent where over 40 percent of countries do not have radiotherapy facilities.