World leaders pledge billions to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria on UN
sidelines
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[September 22, 2022]
By Daphne Psaledakis and Steve Holland
UNITED NATIONS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
Global Fund to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria on Wednesday reached
$14.25 billion pledged as world leaders seek to fight the killer
diseases after progress was knocked off course by the COVID-19 pandemic.
U.S. President Joe Biden, who hosted the conference in New York on the
sidelines of the annual high-level meeting of the United Nations General
Assembly, said the funding is crucial to combating the diseases.
"This is an investment that will save another 20 million lives, reduce
mortality from these diseases another 64% in the next four years," Biden
said.
The United States had previously said it would pledge $6 billion for the
next funding cycle.
The fund, a public/private alliance based in Geneva, is seeking $18
billion for its next three-year funding cycle from governments, civil
society and the private sector. Before Wednesday's conference, it had
already raised more than a third of the total.
The Global Fund said the $14.25 billion figure is likely to increase as
more donations are expected.
"For the government and people of Malawi, this is not a conference but a
life saver," Lazarus Chakwera, the president of Malawi, said earlier in
the day, pledging $1 million.
According to UNAIDS, there were 990,000 adults and children in Malawi
living with HIV in 2021, and USAID says that tuberculosis is a "major
public health problem in Malawi."
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen pledged 715 million euros
($703.63 million) to the fund, which she said was an increase of 30%
from its previous pledge.
"We can cure tuberculosis. We can prevent malaria. We can fight these
terrible diseases. We will end AIDS, we will end tuberculosis, we will
end malaria – once and for all," she said.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks at the Global Fund’s Seventh Replenishment Conference in New
York, U.S., September 21, 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis
French President Emmanuel Macron
pledged another 300 million euros, bringing France's total
contribution for the funding period to 1.6 billion euros.
Nigeria pledged $13.2 million, the Netherlands pledged 180 million
euros and Indonesia pledged $15.5 million, alongside private sector
pledges.
In its 2022 report, the fund said the reach of its treatment and
prevention efforts rebounded last year after declining for the first
time in almost 20 years in 2020, but the world is still not on track
to defeat these diseases.
The fund estimates its work has saved around 50 million lives since
its inception in 2002.
But in 2020, the numbers treated for tuberculosis fell by 19%, to
4.5 million. In 2021, this went back up by 12%, to 5.3 million -
still just below the 5.5 million pre-pandemic number.
While malaria and AIDS programmes did exceed 2019 levels, the
pandemic's impact means they are still off-track from ending the
diseases by 2030.
The Fund has also warned the war in Ukraine and the global food
crisis could exacerbate the situation. Infectious diseases are
usually much deadlier for people whose bodies are weakened by
malnutrition, and they also do not respond as well to treatment or
prevention efforts.
($1 = 1.0162 euros)
(Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis and John Irish at the United Nations
and Steve Holland in New York; Additional reporting by Jennifer
Rigby in London and Eric Beech in Washington; Editing by Josie Kao)
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