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Africa Centres for
Disease Control and
Prevention (Africa CDC)
launches the African
Strategic Advisory Group on
Genomics
(ADDIS ABABA)
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The Africa Centres for
Disease Control and
Prevention (Africa CDC)
has
announced the launch of the
African Strategic Advisory
Group on Genomics (ASAG), a
new continental advisory
mechanism established to
provide independent,
multidisciplinary, and
trusted technical guidance
on the strategic governance
and implementation of
genomics across Africa.
The launch of ASAG marks
a pivotal step in advancing
Africa CDC’s vision to
democratize access to
genomics for better public
health programming,
precision public health,
integrated disease
surveillance, outbreak
preparedness and response,
and the development and
local manufacturing of
medical countermeasures. The
Group will support Africa
CDC in ensuring that
genomics is deployed
ethically, responsibly, and
for maximum public good,
with African leadership,
ownership, and equitable
benefit-sharing at the
center of continental
genomics initiatives.
Africa has made major
progress in expanding
genomic capacity through the
Africa Pathogen Genomics
Initiative, which has
strengthened sequencing,
laboratory, bioinformatics,
and data systems across the
continent. These investments
have supported the use of
genomics for the
surveillance and
characterization of public
health threats, including
mpox, cholera, antimicrobial
resistance, malaria, and
other epidemic-prone
diseases. ASAG will help
consolidate these gains
while guiding the broader
application of pathogen and
human genomics to address
Africa’s priority health
challenges, including the
rising burden of
non-communicable diseases.
ASAG is aligned with
Africa CDC’s broader agenda
of Africa Health Security
and Sovereignty, which
emphasizes stronger African
institutions, continental
preparedness and response
capacity, sustainable health
financing, digital
transformation, local
manufacturing, and pooled
procurement. Through its
advisory role, ASAG will
provide recommendations on
strategic priorities,
harmonized standards,
capacity building,
technology transfer, data
governance, privacy,
intellectual property,
ethics, and partnerships to
strengthen genomics as a
cornerstone of Africa’s
health security and
development.
The
inaugural eight-member ASAG
brings together renowned
African and global experts
across pathogen genomics,
human genomics,
bioinformatics, clinical
genetics, precision
medicine, public health,
data governance, ethics, and
capacity building: Prof.
Christian Happi, Prof.
Ambroise Wonkam, Prof. Leon
Mutesa, Prof. Tulio de
Oliveira, Prof. Ghada
El-Kamah, Prof. Nicky
Mulder, Prof. Charles
Rotimi, and Dr. Yosr Hamdi.
At its inaugural
meeting, ASAG members
elected Prof. Christian
Happi as Chair and Prof.
Ghada El-Kamah as Co-Chair.
Their leadership will guide
the Group’s work in
providing independent,
evidence-based, and
Africa-centered advice to
the Africa CDC, while
supporting collaboration
across African Union Member
States, scientific
institutions, public health
agencies, and partners.
As an Africa
CDC–constituted strategic
advisory mechanism, ASAG
will operate with
independence, transparency,
accountability, scientific
integrity, inclusivity, and
equity. Members will serve
in their personal capacity
and provide non-binding
recommendations to inform
Africa CDC’s continental
genomics programs, while
Africa CDC retains
responsibility for
prioritization,
decision-making, and
implementation in line with
its mandate.
Through
this initiative, Africa CDC
is taking a decisive step
toward a future in which
genomics drives innovation,
improves preparedness for
emerging threats, enables
precision public health,
strengthens health systems,
and delivers better and more
equitable health outcomes
for all Africans.
Source: Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention (Africa CDC)
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