| 19 Novembre 2017
17 November 2017 | MOSCOW/ GENEVA – Today 75 ministers agreed to take urgent action to end tuberculosis by  2030. The announcement came at the first WHO Global Ministerial  Conference on Ending Tuberculosis in the Sustainable Development Era: A  Multisectoral Response, which brought together delegates from 114  countries in Moscow. President Vladimir Putin of the Russian Federation  opened the Conference, together with UN Deputy Secretary General, Amina J  Mohammed and Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO.
 
 "Today marks a critical landmark in the fight to end TB,” said Dr  Tedros. “It signals a long overdue global commitment to stop the death  and suffering caused by this ancient killer.”
 
 The Moscow Declaration to End TB is a promise to increase multisectoral  action as well as track progress, and build accountability. It will  also inform the first UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting on TB in  2018, which will seek further commitments from heads of state.
 
 Global efforts to combat tuberculosis TB have saved an estimated 53  million lives since 2000 and reduced the TB mortality rate by  37%.However, progress in many countries has stalled, global targets are  off-track and persistent gaps remain in TB care and prevention.
 
 As a result, TB still kills more people than any other infectious  disease. There are major problems associated with antimicrobial  resistance, and it is the leading killer of people with HIV.
 
 “One of the main problems has been lack of political will and  inadequate investment in fighting TB,” added Dr Tedros. “Today’s  declaration must go hand in hand with increased investment.”
 
 The meeting was attended by ministers, country delegations, as well as  representatives of civil society and international organizations,  scientists and researchers. More than 1000 participants took part in the  two-day conference which resulted in collective commitment to ramp up  action on four fronts:
 Ministers also promised to minimize the risk and spread of drug  resistance and do more to engage people and communities affected by, and  at risk of, TB.
 
 The Russian Federation, host of the first Ministerial Conference to End  TB, welcomed the Moscow Declaration. “Tuberculosis is a complex,  multi-sectoral problem that requires a systemic and highly coordinated  response to address the conditions which drive the disease,” said  Professor Veronika Skvortsova, Minister of Health, Russian Federation.  “The accountability framework we have agreed to develop, marks a new  beginning, and, with WHO’s support to coordinate and track progress, we  expect the Moscow Declaration to lead us forward to the high-level  meeting of the UN General Assembly in 2018.”