Key Takeaways:
- Egypt pledges to transfer medical know-how and technical support to other African nations as part of expanded Egypt-Africa health cooperation.
- Capacity-building programmes run by Egypt and the Africa CDC, alongside the UPA-led Africa Health ExCon, aim to boost preparedness and rapid-response capabilities.
- Egypt offers medical personnel, vaccines and emergency equipment and highlights presidential initiatives such as hepatitis C elimination and the 100 Million Healthy Lives programme.
Egypt has reaffirmed its commitment to bolster health systems across Africa by sharing its medical and pharmaceutical expertise with partner nations, following a high-level meeting in Cairo between the country’s foreign minister and the director general of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).
Egypt-Africa health cooperation
During talks on Monday, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Emigration and Egyptian Expatriates Badr Abdelatty met with Africa CDC Director General Jean Kaseya, with Hisham Stait, chairman of the Egyptian Authority for Unified Procurement (UPA), also in attendance. The discussions focused on deepening practical cooperation on capacity-building, emergency response and supply chain support across the continent.
Abdelatty said Egypt would transfer its proven experience in the health and pharmaceutical sectors to African nations and underlined the government’s view that a strong health sector is central to achieving sustainable development across Africa. He pointed to joint programmes organised by Egypt’s Ministry of Health and Population in partnership with the Africa CDC as key instruments for strengthening national health capacities.
Officials highlighted ongoing collaboration between the UPA and the Africa CDC in organising the Africa Health ExCon exhibition, now a continental platform that brings together public authorities, private suppliers and technical partners to coordinate efforts in health and medicines procurement. The exhibition has been cited as a vehicle for knowledge exchange and for promoting integration of African health markets.
Practical areas of cooperation identified during the meeting include developing rapid-response mechanisms for health emergencies, streamlining the provision of vaccines and essential medical supplies, and deploying Egyptian medical and technical personnel to support Africa CDC operations. Abdelatty reiterated Egypt’s readiness to provide both human resources and medicines to expand access to care in member states.
The minister also reviewed major national health initiatives launched under the patronage of President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, notably the hepatitis C elimination campaign and the “100 Million Healthy Lives” programme. He described these initiatives as models that Egypt is willing to scale or adapt in partnership with other African countries.
Jean Kaseya welcomed Egypt’s engagement and praised the country’s advanced capabilities in the health and pharmaceutical sectors. He said the Africa CDC looks forward to cementing collaboration with Egypt to enhance health security and resilience across the continent.
Analysts say the move strengthens regional public-health diplomacy by combining Egypt’s production capacity and human resources with the Africa CDC’s continental mandate for disease prevention and emergency response. Enhanced cooperation could improve vaccine distribution chains, increase access to essential medicines and help standardise procurement practices to achieve economies of scale.
As African governments continue to prioritise health security, partnerships of this kind are likely to play an increasing role in closing capacity gaps, reducing reliance on external suppliers and improving the continent’s readiness to respond to outbreaks and other emergencies.

















