Africa's public
health landscape entered a new era this week as Ghanaian pharmaceutical expert
Dr. Delese Mimi Darko was appointed the inaugural Director-General of the
African Medicines Agency (AMA). The landmark decision was announced during the
Second Ordinary Session of the AMA Conference of State Parties in Rwanda's
capital.

The seasoned
regulator, who previously transformed Ghana's Food and Drugs Authority into a
globally respected institution, now assumes leadership of the continental body
at a critical juncture. Established to harmonize medicine regulation across 55
nations, the AMA represents Africa's collective ambition to ensure drug safety,
combat counterfeit medications, and accelerate access to vital treatments.
Her selection
follows a rigorous continental search that highlighted her exceptional work
modernizing Ghana's regulatory systems and championing local vaccine production
during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The newly
confirmed Director-General faces a formidable agenda: establishing the AMA's
operational structures, implementing continent-wide regulatory harmonization,
and addressing Africa's heavy reliance on imported medicines which currently
exceed 70% of pharmaceutical consumption. Her tenure begins as the continent
works to implement the African Continental Free Trade Area's pharmaceutical
manufacturing provisions.

"Under Dr.
Darko's leadership, we expect the AMA to become the cornerstone of Africa's
health sovereignty," noted a senior
official from the Africa Centres for Disease Control. The agency's creation
fulfills aspirations first articulated in the 2009 African Union Special Summit
on HIV/AIDS and reflected in subsequent treaties.
With temporary
headquarters in Kigali, the AMA will coordinate national regulatory bodies,
facilitate medicine approvals, and build capacity across member states.
By: Nana Appiah Acquaye