Pope Francis is on a six-day tour of Africa, which Western
media rushed to dub the riskiest of his papacy so far.
Their justification was that this trip takes him to Kenya and
Uganda, which have suffered attacks from Islamist militants Al-Shabaab, and to
the Central African Republic which has struggled to come to grips with
sectarian conflict.
Francis however shrugged off the safety fears, joking that he
was “more worried about the mosquitoes”.
He was also very serious: the mosquito, despite its tiny
frame, belongs to the deadliest animal family in the world. It has had more
impact on African history than many realise. It was instrumental in
defining mass movements of groups in Africa, and indeed the story of
colonialism would have been markedly different today had colonisers been
able to come to terms with malaria.
In Kenya he delivered a stark message warning it would be
“catastrophic” if an agreement is not reached at the UN climate summit
which opens on Monday.
Mosquito-borne diseases are expected to increase with climate
change, and could between 2030 and 2050 result in an additional 60,000 deaths
per year, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO), contributing to the
total of additional 250,000 deaths a year expected to be caused by global
warming.
Malaria already kills around 800,000 people per year.
Global warming could also facilitate the spread of infectious
diseases which depend on carriers such as mosquitoes, according to interviews
carried out by news agency AFP.
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