04/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/01/2026 01:13
EAC Headquarters, Arusha, Tanzania,31st March, 2026: The East African Community (EAC) Secretariat has reinforced the region's capacity to prevent, detect, and respond to health threats by establishing mechanisms for enhanced cross-sectoral knowledge exchange at the third Regional One Health Stakeholder Meeting held in Nairobi. These steps mark a decisive move in implementing the EAC Regional One Health Strategy (2022-2027), ensuring that East Africans are better protected from pandemics and emerging public health risks.
One Health is a globally recognized approach that integrates human, animal, and environmental health to address interconnected health challenges. The EAC's Regional One Health Strategy operationalizes this approach, guiding coordinated regional action across sectors and disciplines to safeguard public health.
The meeting, brought together representatives from Partner States, regional institutions, academia, civil society and international partners. Participants agreed on priority actions to strengthen regional alignment on pandemic preparedness, including:
Guidance for Partner States on priority One Health topics requiring targeted support through international cooperation.
The meeting took place amid global developments such as the World Health Organization's adoption of the Pandemic Agreement, underscoring the EAC's strategic role in translating international commitments into coordinated regional action.
During the discussions, Prof. James Wabacha, Animal Health Expert at AU-IBAR, highlighted that effective outbreak response hinges on systematic cross-sectoral information sharing.
EAC Deputy Secretary General, Hon. Andrea Ariik Malueth, noted, "The EAC Secretariat, in collaboration with partners, has long supported Partner States in applying One Health to pandemic preparedness. This meeting identifies capacity gaps and outlines concrete interventions to strengthen the regional One Health workforce."
The meeting concluded with a commitment to operationalize these priorities through continued multi-sectoral collaboration, ensuring regional interventions are evidence-based, coordinated, and results-oriented.
Dr. John Opolot, Assistant Commissioner for Veterinary Health and Zoonoses, Ministry of Health, Uganda, emphasized that sustained engagement across sectors is essential for effective implementation.
The meeting was supported by the EAC Support to Pandemic Preparedness in the EAC Region (PanPrep) Project, funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).
For more information, please contact:
Corporate Communications and Public Affairs Department
EAC Secretariat
Arusha, Tanzania
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. / This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Website: www.eac.int
About the East African Community:
The East African Community (EAC) is a regional intergovernmental organization comprising the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Federal Republic of Somalia, the Republic of Burundi, the Republic of Kenya, the Republic of Rwanda, the Republic of South Sudan, the Republic of Uganda and the United Republic of Tanzania. The EAC aims to expand and deepen economic, political, social, and cultural integration to improve the quality of life of the people of East Africa through increased competitiveness, value-added production, trade, and investment.