Forbes Africa

All You Need To Know About The Covid-19 Vaccine

SOMEWHERE IN THE DEEP UNEXPLORED depths of Madagascar, an unknown herb is probably on its way to becoming a global panacea for the pandemic.

This is Africa, a continent ripe with possibilities, where you cannot rule out that a cure for Covid-19 could perhaps come from nature itself. Just like Madagascar, currently touting Artemisia Afra ( in Nguni languages and previously used as an ingredient for treating malaria) as a potential cure for Covid-19, bigger economies like South Africa are also looking to the botanical world for answers. Its national Department of Basic Education has reassigned R15 million ($960,982) of its budget on Covid-19 interventions such as Artemisia. Nigeria has also made a move towards a more homeopathic approach, as a ministerial committee has been put in place to further examine the potential natural compounds hold in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Forbes Africa

Forbes Africa4 min read
Best Of Both Worlds
There have been thousands of African footballers who have left the continent to seek fame and fortune on the football fields of Europe, where the earnings can be eyewateringly plentiful and international glory beckons. The likes of Samuel Eto’o, Abed
Forbes Africa3 min read
The Macroeconomics Of Rwanda’s Mining Sector: Insights, Outlook And Challenges
Rwanda’s national economic tapestry is woven with diverse threads, and one strand is the mining sector. While bringing in mineral export revenues, the sector is also a chief contributor to the national treasury, in 2022, contributing beyond RWF27 bil
Forbes Africa4 min read
Tasting success
Paul Siguqa, owner of the Klein Goederust wine farm in Franschhoek in South Africa’s Western Cape province, is an unlikely figure in the country’s wine industry. His journey into wine, even more so. It starts on the Backsberg farm, less than 15km fro

Related Books & Audiobooks