| HEALTH:
With a Billion in Pledges, AIDS Fund Still Falls Short
By
Thalif Deen
UNITED
NATIONS, Jun 26 (IPS) - After a slow and hesitant start, the much-ballyhooed
Global AIDS Fund has garnered close to one billion dollars in contributions
- still far short of its target of seven billion to 10 billion dollars
per year to fight the deadly disease.
The
pledges and contributions came during the three-day UN General Assembly
Special Session on HIV-AIDS, scheduled to end here Wednesday.
The
United Kingdom doubled its original contribution Tuesday, matching
the 200 million dollars pledged by the United States last month.
The two governments are the fund's largest contributors.
So
far, total contributions have amounted to more than 920 million
dollars, including new contributions from Norway (110 million dollars),
Sweden (60 million dollars) and Canada (73 million dollars).
Last
month, France pledged about 127 million dollars to the fund. The
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, a private charity set up by the
Microsoft founder, contributed 100 million dollars.
Three
African countries - each stricken with AIDS and each saddled with
financial troubles including extensive foreign debt - pledged 13
million dollars Monday. Commitments included 10 million dollars
from Nigeria, two million dollars from Uganda, and one million dollars
from Zimbabwe.
Sue
Markham, spokesperson for the President of the General Assembly,
told reporters that the special session "was not expected to
be a pledging conference" although most pledges were made during
the meeting.
The
contributions show a high level of political commitment by member
states, Markham said. She added that some of the contributions were
spread over a three-year period while others were for general spending
on AIDS and were not earmarked for the global fund.
The
Irish government said it would spend an additional 30 million dollars
per year directly on helping the world's poorer nations, while Finland
said it would contribute about six million dollars to UNAIDS, the
joint UN agency coordinating the world body's response to the pandemic.
Members
of the Group of Eight - the 'Group of Seven' industrial powers plus
Russia - reportedly will wait to announce additional contributions
until their summit in Genoa, Italy next month. The group's core
members are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom,
and United States.
When
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan proposed the creation of the AIDS
fund last March, he aimed at a 10-billion-dollar target, setting
the minimum amount needed at seven billion dollars.
UN
officials said they expected pledges to inch above the billion-dollar
mark by the end of this week's special session - leaving a huge
shortfall.
The
fund is primarily aimed at controlling AIDS but would also be used
to fight tuberculosis and malaria.
According
to Julia Celeves, a UNAIDS senior policy officer, only about 1.8
billion dollars is currently being spent on AIDS annually - or between
5.2 billion and 8.2 billion dollars less than what's needed.
Even
as US Secretary of State Colin Powell told delegates Monday that
the 200-million-dollar US pledge was only "seed money,"
several anti-AIDS activists and non-governmental organisations dismissed
the US contribution as too little, too late.
Powell
said the US contribution was meant to jump start the global fund
and help generate "billions more from donors all over the world,"
adding: "More will come from the United States as we learn
where our support can be most effective."
Paul
Davis of the non-governmental Health GAP Coalition said the US pledge
- roughly equivalent to three dollars per person with AIDS in sub-Saharan
Africa - would be "enough to buy dinner (but) not enough to
save a life."
Of
the 36 million people the UN estimates live with HIV-AIDS worldwide,
more than 25 million are in Africa.
Following
Washington's "dubious lead," Davis said, several other
countries have contributed much smaller amounts, jeopardising the
fund's ability to make a meaningful impact against the epidemic.
Mark
Curtis of the UK charity Christian Aid warned, however, that even
if fully financed, the fund risked raising false expectations that
the spreading disease could be tackled with drugs alone.
"Christian
Aid believes the international community needs to direct its energy
towards massive increases in aid through existing channels,"
he argued. "It also needs to focus on reforming those existing
channels rather than being distracted by discussions of a new fund."
Tim
Atwater of Jubilee USA, a group lobbying to cancel poor countries'
foreign debts, said "the 200 million dollars which (President
George W.) Bush has pledged is the same amount as sub-Saharan Africa
spends on debt payments in less than a week."
The
US Congress could write the cheque on a Monday and by Friday, Africa
would have paid it back, he said.
Lucy
Matthew of London-based Drop the Debt said that in one day, Malawi
spends on debt servicing what it would cost to train 160 new teachers.
Some 30 percent of the country's schoolteachers are infected with
HIV, according to UN estimates.
In
Zambia, where one child in seven is an orphan because of HIV-AIDS,
four days of debt repayments could cover the annual costs of housing
and feeding some 10,000 children, she added. (END/IPS)
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