Timor-Leste becomes malaria-free after recording 223,000 cases in a single year
Timor-Leste has achieved malaria-free certification from the World Health Organization, eliminating a disease that once struck more than 223,000 people in a single year. The designation marks the culmination of a national malaria program launched in 2003, just one year after the country gained independence from decades of occupation and conflict. Reaching zero indigenous cases required free diagnosis and treatment, widespread bed net distribution, community health workers, and a real-time surveillance system built to catch reintroduction at borders. Timor-Leste is now only the third country in the WHO South-East Asia Region to earn this status, joining the Maldives and Sri Lanka.









