Mary Robinson and Realizing Rights visit Sierra Leone
to support efforts to improve maternal health

29 July 2010
"If the African Union succeeds in fulfilling its commitment to maternal health, it will benefit the economies of countries to have healthy populations."

- Mary Robinson

Mary Robinson has urged African leaders to boost support for maternal health, during a visit to Sierra Leone where mortality rates are among the highest in the world.

"If the African Union succeeds in fulfilling its commitment to maternal health, it will benefit the economies of countries to have healthy populations," she said at a news conference in Freetown.

Robinson is on a two-day visit to observe implementation of a 90 million dollar (67 million euro) initiative to provide free health care for pregnant women, nursing mothers and children under-five launched in April.

"Sierra Leone has taken a major step forward in promoting maternal health as a human right not only for its own people but also globally, as a model of leadership and initiative in this critical area."

However she raised concerns about the lack of running water in one clinic she visited and a shortage of incubators in another.

According to the World Health Organisation, Sierra Leone has the world's highest death rate among pregnant women and children.

The west African country is one of the world's poorest nations and is still emerging from a brutal decade-long civil war that was officially declared over in February 2002 and left much of the infrastructure in ruins.

Related Links:

Africa must focus on maternal health - AFP, 28 July 2010

Robinson: Malawi needs help on maternal mortality - BBC News, 26 October 2009