India scraps funding ties
with Gates Foundation on immunization
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[February 08, 2017]
By Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A group backed by the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that works on India's immunization
program will now be funded by the health ministry, a government official
said, a move in part prompted by fears foreign donors could influence
policy making.
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The decision is seen as part of India's broader clampdown on
non-governmental organizations to assert control over decision
making in key policy areas. Last year, India ordered the dismissal
of dozens of foreign-funded health experts working on public welfare
schemes.
The Gates Foundation has for years funded the Immunization Technical
Support Unit (ITSU), which provides strategy and monitoring advice
for New Delhi's massive immunization program that covers about 27
million infants each year.
It will now be funded by the government which felt there was a need
to completely manage the crucial program on its own, senior health
ministry official Soumya Swaminathan told Reuters.
"There was a perception that an external agency is funding it, so
there could be influence," Swaminathan said on Wednesday.
Swaminathan, however, stressed there were no instances of influence
found and the decision was only in part prompted by a wider
perception about foreign funding of the program. The unit will
continue to exist, she said.
A spokeswoman for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) said
its grant for the ITSU ends this month. "We are in advanced stages
of discussion with the ministry on the contours of the next phase of
technical support," she said.
Critics have in the past raised concerns the BMGF should not have
any association with the program due to apparent conflicts of
interest. That's because BMGF also backs GAVI, a global vaccine
alliance that counts big pharmaceutical companies as its partners.
India's immunization program vaccinates children to shield them from
life-threatening conditions such as measles and polio, and is viewed
by experts as crucial for improving public health.
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A key win has been the successful eradication of polio, but more
than a million Indian children still die every year before reaching
the age of five.
"The government must ensure that universal immunization does not
suffer in any way," said Keshav Desiraju, a former federal health
secretary.
BMGF, the charity funded by the personal wealth of Microsoft
co-founder Bill Gates, has enjoyed good relations with the
government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Douglas Busvine)
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