Zambia Says Privacy, Minerals Concerns Stall US Health-Aid Deal
Doctors care for patients in a clinic in Lusaka, Zambia.
Photographer: Salim Dawood/AFP/Getty ImagesZambia’s talks with the US over a new $2 billion health-aid deal stalled because the proposed agreement included data sharing that would violate citizens’ privacy rights and was conditional on first agreeing to preferential access to mineral resources, the nation’s foreign minister said.
The inclusion of the terms related to data sharing were unacceptable and “unconscionable,” Mulambo Haimbe said in a statement Monday. He also said it was concerning that the health pact depended on the governments signing a critical minerals agreement favoring US companies.