Gates Donates $100M to U.N. for AIDS
by CONSTANT BRAND
Associated Press Writer
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- The
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on Tuesday donated $100 million to a
United Nations health fund to fight AIDS and called on European Union nations
and other countries to make further contributions.
''A dramatic increase in funding is necessary and required to fight the pandemic,''
said foundation president Patty Stonesifer, who was in Brussels to meet with
EU officials.
Stonesifer said the fight against AIDS was a ''top priority''
for Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft and one of the world's richest men.
''We support the establishment of the fund ... Improving health is key to
poverty reduction,'' Stonesifer said, adding there were five million new infections
of the virus last year alone.
The announcement of the contribution to the global fund was made ahead of
a key U.N. conference on AIDS to be held next week in New York.
The fund was proposed by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan in April, when
he called for a ''war chest'' of $7 billion to $10 billion annually to halt
AIDS, which has hit Africa hardest and become the continent's primary killer.
At a U.N. conference on poverty last month, EU countries stepped back from
donating money to the fund, arguing there were not enough guarantees yet that
the money would be spent correctly.
Many richer countries were skeptical that the health fund would be a step
in the right direction. Poul Nielson, the EU's development commissioner, argued
that the fund needed to broaden its approach to include other diseases, including
tuberculosis and malaria. The EU also wants to tie the fund to providing cheaper
drugs for poorer countries.
The Microsoft founder has also donated $126 million to an earlier AIDS initiative
and $750 million in the past five years to boost global immunization efforts
and to research new medicine. Some 3 million children a year die from vaccine-preventable
diseases.
''We believe that there is no higher priority than stopping transmission of
this deadly disease,'' said Bill Gates in a statement announcing the new donation.
Of 36 million people infected with HIV around the world, 26 million live in
Africa. Globally, the virus has killed 23 million people, including 17 million
in sub-Saharan Africa alone.
Stonesifer has been traveling around the world drumming up support for the
fund. So far, the United States and France have been the only large donor
countries to have contributed to the global fund, giving $200 million and
$135 million respectively.
The Gates foundation's assets topped $22 billion in 2000 and it gave away
almost $1 billion.