| 04 Février 2020
The WHO Executive Board, currently holding its 146th session in Geneva,  has re-appointed Dr Matshidiso Moeti for a second term as WHO Regional  Director for Africa and Dr Hans Kluge as Regional Director for Europe in  his first term.
 
 Re-election of the Regional Director for Africa 
 
 “I am greatly honoured to have been appointed to serve a second term as  the WHO Regional Director for Africa and I would like to thank you for  the trust you have shown,” said Dr Moeti. “As Africa increasingly faces  the double burden of diseases, the next five years in public health will  be crucial in laying a strong foundation to reverse this burden.”
 
 Dr Moeti, who is from Botswana, said she will accelerate action towards  attaining universal health coverage so that everyone can access care  without financial hardship. Despite significant health challenges in the  African region, which serves 47 countries, progress is being made in  strengthening health systems, combating diseases and improving people’s  health. Recent efforts by Member States include policies to tackle  tobacco use, vaccines for cervical cancer and malaria prevention as well  as joint initiatives to procure medicines affordably.
 
 As the first woman WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Moeti was  elected as WHO Regional Director for Africa on 1 February 2015. In 1999,  she joined the WHO Regional Office for Africa, and has served as Deputy  Regional Director, Assistant Regional Director, Director of  Noncommunicable Diseases, WHO Representative for Malawi, Coordinator of  the Inter-Country Support Team for the South and East African countries  and Regional Advisor for HIV/AIDS.
 
 Before joining WHO, Dr Moeti worked as Team Leader of the Africa and  Middle East Desk in Geneva (1997–1999) with the Joint United Nations  Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). She also worked with the United Nations  Children's Fund (UNICEF) as Regional Health Advisor for East and  Southern Africa; and with Botswana’s Ministry of Health as a clinician  and public health specialist.
 
 Dr Moeti holds a degree in medicine (M.B., B.S) and a master’s degree in  public health (MSc in Community Health for Developing Countries) from  the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, University of London and the  London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, respectively. She was  awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the London School of Hygiene and  Tropical Medicine and an Honorary Doctorate from the University of  Health & Allied Sciences, Ghana.
 
 New Regional Director for Europe
 
 In his new role as Regional Director for Europe, Dr Hans Kluge will  direct international health work across the 53 countries of the WHO  European Region, serving a population of 900 million people. He said his  vision for health in the European region is for no one to be left  behind and that major government policies should include health for  people-centered and financially-sustainable healthcare and public health  services, including affordable medicines.
 
 Dr Kluge is a Belgian national who was previously Director of the  Division of Health Systems and Public Health at WHO/Europe. In his role  with WHO/Europe, he prioritized a participatory approach with staff  based on the WHO values charter as well as eradicating harassment.
 
 Explaining his vision for health, Dr Kluge commented, “Every child,  every woman and every man in our beautiful and diverse Region has the  right to health. I am committed to delivering united action for better  health. This means applying the best data and evidence, demanding  increasing investment in health, strengthening our health systems around  people’s needs, and extending inclusive and non-discriminatory access  to health care to all. By so doing, we build fair, happy, sustainable  societies for ourselves and generations to come.”
 
 Over the past decade at WHO/Europe, Dr Kluge helped introduce  community-based primary health care in Greece during the financial  crisis, the Tallinn Charter implementation, and in 2018, pushing forward  commitments adopted at the Global Conference on Primary Health Care in  Astana, Kazakhstan.
 
 For the past 25 years, Dr Kluge has been active in public health,  beginning his career as a family doctor in Belgium and serving for  Médecins Sans Frontières in Liberia and Somalia. His work involved  large-scale tuberculosis programmes in prison systems in Siberia and  several countries of the former Soviet Union. At the WHO Regional Office  for South-East Asia, he headed tuberculosis, AIDS and malaria  programmes in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and Myanmar.