Global Aids fund provides $2.75bn in grants

The Global Fund to Fight Aids, tuberculosis and malaria approved 94 new grants worth $2

The Global Fund to Fight Aids, tuberculosis and malaria approved 94 new grants worth $2.75 billion over two years, its executive director said today.

Zimbabwe will receive $169 million after it returned $7.3 million the fund said had been "confiscated" by Zimbabwe's reserve bank in 2007.

The Global Fund, launched by the G8 club of major industrial nations in 2002, says it has prevented 2.5 million people from dying from HIV/Aids, TB and malaria.

"We have a fantastic message to bring back to the rich nations of the world: programmes to fight these three diseases save lives, reduce disease burdens, and strengthen health systems," executive director Michel Kazatchkine said after a meeting in India's capital.

The grants are the highest amount of new financing the Global Fund has approved, bringing its portfolio to $14.4 billion in 140 countries.

But the US-based Global Aids alliance advocacy group said last week that US and French officials want drastic cutbacks, preferring to concentrate on bilateral health programmes.

"At this point there is no reason for us to believe that they will cut funding," Nicolas Demey, a spokesman for the Global Fund, adding that both countries "have always been strong supporters" of the Global Fund.

The Global Fund said last week it would be "extremely firm" with Zimbabwe after it was unable to withdraw millions of US dollars from the country's reserve bank.

Reuters

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