UN-BACKED GLOBAL FUND LAUDS RICH
NATIONS' PLEDGE ON UNIVERSAL AIDS TREATMENT
New York, Jun 8 2007
The United Nations-backed Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria today welcomed
the recommitment of the "Group of Eight" leading industrialized
nations to universal access to HIV/AIDS treatment.
The endorsement by G8 leaders of $6 billion to $8 billion per
year for the Global Fund, a three-fold increase from the current
level as part of their recommitment to universal access to treatment
is "very good news," said Dr. Michel Kazatchkine, the
Fund's Executive Director.
The main UN agency dealing with AIDS had called on the leaders
attending three-day summit in Heiligendamm, Germany, to step up
their response to the disease.
In a statement released in advance of the summit, the Joint
UN Programme on HIV/AIDS had warned that in 2006, resources available
for AIDS fell "dramatically short of the estimated needs
by $6 billion."
It also cautioned that the 11 million people projected to need
antiretroviral treatment by 2010 "may be underestimated by
up to 50 per cent."
As such, UNAIDS urged the leaders from Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Russian Federation, the United Kingdom and the
United States to translate their previous commitments on AIDS
- including their 2005 pledge to provide $60 billion to fight
HIV and other illnesses in Africa - into tangible action.
"AIDS must be a top priority for the G8 this year and every
year - in commitments and action," the agency said.
Set up in 2002 on the initiative of then Secretary-General Kofi
Annan, the Global Fund is a public-private partnership that has
committed $7.6 billion so far to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and
malaria in 136 countries. The three diseases kill more than 6
million people a year, and that number is growing.
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