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Jean Kaseya is a Congolese medical doctor and public health executive, who serves as the Director General at Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa-CDC), the African public health agency, based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, since April 2023.

Kaseya holds a medical degree from the University of Kinshasa and a master's degree in public health from Henri Poincaré University, France. Since 1997, Kaseya has been serving Africa public health through local and international organizations. Starting within DRC Ministry of Health, Kaseya has raised to a position of technical coordinator for the WHO Meningitis Vaccine Project based in Geneva in 2008. Between 2009 and 2011, he was a Senior Director of Programs at GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, based in Geneva, Switzerland. Subsequently, he joined UNICEF in Africa where he held senior positions for 9 years in Ivory Coast, Congo Brazzaville, and Namibia, at various times. Prior to his election for Africa-CDC, Kaseya was the Head of the African Health Diagnostics Platform (AHDP/EIB) Global Team and Country Director for DRC at Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), since November 2020.

Biography
Kaseya was born in 1970, he grew up and completed his elementary and secondary education in Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). In 1990, Kaseya attended the University of Kinshasa in DRC, he graduated with a Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree in 1997. In 2005, Kaseya enrolled at Henri Poincaré University in France to pursue a postgraduate degree, and he earned a master's degree in public health there in 2006.

Career
In 1997, after graduating from University of Kinshasa, Kaseya started working under DRC Ministry of Health as a general practitioner at the Kinshasa General Hospital for a year. Subsequently he became medical director at the Kahemba General Hospital in DRC until December 1999. In 2000, Kaseya worked as a chief in the DRC Ministry of Health responsible for Routine Immunization. In addition, he served as senior health advisor to the former president of the DRC, Laurent-Désiré Kabila for a year, until 2001.

From 2001 to 2008, Kaseya served as a senior team leader for USAID projects in the DRC (Sanru III and AXxes). Sanru was an initiative in the DRC to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, often referred to as the Global Fund. He served as its country representative in DRC between 2006 and 2008.

In 2008, Kaseya moved to Geneva, Switzerland where he was appointed the technical coordinator for the WHO Meningitis Vaccine Project, until 2009. In this role, he led the development of the Meningitis A Investment Project (worth $571 million) to support the introduction of the new MenAfriVac vaccine in Africa, to eradicate Meningitis A as a major public health problem. Subsequently, he was appointed as Senior Director of Programs at GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, based in Geneva, Switzerland. He was also responsible for Gavi programmes for African countries including activities related to measles, yellow fever and meningitis, until 2011.

Since 2011, Kaseya held various positions at UNICEF for 9 years, including Senior Health Emergencies Manager in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, Chief of Child Survival and Development in Congo Brazzaville and Namibia, at various times. From June 2020 to February 2021, Kaseya served as the team leader of a charity coalition of Africa partners for Global Polio Eradication Initiative. He liaised with African governments and partners including WHO, Unicef, BMGF, IFRC, Rotary, CDC and Gavi, to ensure the effectiveness, quality and timeliness of Emergency Operations Centers in Africa.

Since November 2020, Kaseya has also been the Head of the African Health Diagnostics Platform (AHDP/EIB) Global Team and Country Director for DRC at Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), the position he left when he was elected as Director General at Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa-CDC) in February 2023, the first Director General of Africa CDC elected by African Heads of State.

Other activities
During 2024 African Union Summit, the Heads of States and Governments recognized the need to establish the pooled procurement mechanism under the leadership of Africa CDC and endorsed the Africa Medical Supplies Platform (AMSP) as the platform for the mechanism. Since then, led by Director-General Kaseya, Africa CDC has developed the African Pooled Procurement Mechanism (APPM) to improve access to quality and affordable health product technologies and promote local manufacturing to create a favorable environment for vaccine manufacturing. The policy aligns with African ambition of manufacturing at least 60% of the total vaccine doses required on the continent by 2040.