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Image for Kids in Brazil’s favelas are eliminating dengue fever – by breeding mosquitos

Kids in Brazil’s favelas are eliminating dengue fever – by breeding mosquitos​

With its densely-packed houses, Brazil's Complexo da Maré is an area vulnerable to outbreaks of dengue fever. By raising mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia bacteria, local children are helping eliminate the disease

Children are helping combat dengue fever in Brazil’s favelas by breeding Aedes aegypti mosquitoes – the very insect which spreads the disease.
These mosquitoes, however, are different. They’re infected with Wolbachia bacteria under a pioneering initiative from the World Mosquito Program (WMP).
Wolbachia cripples the insects’ ability to transmit blood-borne viruses like dengue, Zika, chikungunya and yellow fever. The bacteria is spread by releasing captive mosquitoes to breed with wild populations.

Dengue infects almost 400 million people a year worldwide, killing tens of thousands. Brazil is the worst affected nation on the planet, and its densely populated favelas – often with poor sanitation – are particularly vulnerable to infectious disease.
Community engagement is seen as essential to the success of the WMP’s ‘Wolbachia method’. In Brazil, outreach into schools has been realised through the Wolbito na escola (Wolbito at school) programme, which trains educators to teach students how Wolbachia can be used to combat mosquito-borne disease.
The learning continues at home, too. In Rio’s Complexo da Maré – a sprawl of 16 favelas home to 130,000 people – children are rearing the Wolbachia infected bugs in empty margarine tubs.
I think it should be replicated in other places, here in Brazil, Africa, anywhere in the world it works
Enthused by the programme’s success, community representative Lucia Cabral, from Rio’s Complexo do Alemão favela, said: “I think it should be replicated in other places, here in Brazil, Africa, anywhere in the world it works.”
The WMP has reached almost 2.5 million people in Brazil since 2017, and protected 10 million people worldwide across 11 countries and three continents.
WMP epidemiologist and director of impact assessment Dr Katie Anders said: “This self-sustaining, safe and cost effective method gives communities long term resilience against the multiple diseases transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.”
 
Not quite justice but it's better than nothing. The money should go back to the people who donated it, not the church.

A Baptist minister renowned in Louisiana has acknowledged stealing nearly $900,000 from his church, affiliated rental properties, his congregants and a charter school.

Charles Southall III, who for more than three decades led First Emanuel Baptist church in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to charges of money-laundering.


According to court documents Southall endorsed, the minister embezzled donations from congregants that were meant to fund church charitable projects and building improvements.

He also took grant and loan funds awarded to to the Edgar P Harney Spirit of Excellence Academy, which he had created, and diverted them to a bank account controlled by him and a co-conspirator whose name was withheld from documents.

Southall further pocketed rental and sale payments derived from properties owned by his church.

Prosecutors said Southall would use the money to pay off his credit card bills and cover other personal expenses.

As part of a plea agreement with federal prosecutors in New Orleans, the 64-year-old agreed to repay $687,000 to First Emanuel, $85,000 to Spirit of Excellence and $110,000 to others who were victimized.
 
Not quite justice but it's better than nothing. The money should go back to the people who donated it, not the church.


Be a little interesting to see what sort of punishment will be doled out to him on this. Seems like another one of those 'white-collar crimes' to me.

"He could receive up to 10 years in prison at a sentencing hearing tentatively set for 17 January, though defendants who plead guilty without going to trial rarely receive the harshest punishment available.

Before his prosecution,
Southall enjoyed close ties to some of New Orleans’ political and business elite. "
 
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