Equatorial Guinea’s high-tech push to end malaria by 2030
Equatorial Guinea’s high-tech push to end malaria by 2030
Tags: Africa, Malaria, Policy, Vector controlRonald Musoke, The Independent, 2026.
In the humid equatorial belt of Central Africa; where dense forests, heavy rains and winding rivers create ideal breeding grounds for mosquitoes, malaria has long been a stubborn public health adversary. For Equatorial Guinea, the disease has shaped health outcomes, economic prospects and daily life for decades. Now the small oil-rich nation is attempting something few countries in malaria-endemic regions have managed: complete elimination. Speaking during a virtual press briefing held on Feb. 26, hosted by the Addis Ababa-based Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Equatorial Guinea’s Minister of Health, Social Welfare and Health Infrastructure, Mitoha Ondo’o Ayekaba, laid out an ambitious national strategy known as Vision 2030. The goal is simple but formidable—eradicate malaria across the country within the next five years. The plan builds on two decades of progress on Bioko Island and introduces a new phase of intervention combining vaccines, advanced surveillance, cutting-edge vector control and emerging technologies such as genetically modified mosquitoes. “This is a historic transition from advanced malaria control to full national elimination,” Ayekaba said. But the path from control to eradication will test the limits of science, policy and community engagement.

