• #Malaria programme gets kiss of death from #Global_Fund : Nature
    http://blogs.nature.com/news/2012/11/malaria-medicines-venture-gets-kiss-of-death-from-global-fund.html

    The Global Fund’s press release detailing its plans is entitled “Board Approves Integration of AMF-m into Core Global Fund Grant Processes“, and much of its soothingly reassuring content would perhaps have many thinking that the AMF-m’s integration into the Global Fund’s core grants system is good news. But it is in effect being killed. There’s will be no new money ringfenced for the AMF-m once it runs through it’s current funding up to the end of 2013, which means that any countries wanting to set aside cash for the private sector will be required to take this from their country grants from the Global Fund. In reality, that will likely translate into AMF-m activities simply being terminated in most countries, leading to local price rises in ACTs, and the drugs disappearing off the shelves of local pharmacies. AMF-m’s clout in negotiating bulk pricing deals internationally will also likely be weakened.

    #santé #paludisme

  • #Global_Fund monies finally released | #South_Africa
    http://plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=94927

    More than seven months overdue, the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria grant will finally be released to key South African AIDS organizations that have been struggling to survive. Some were on the verge of shutting down.

    The Global Fund released US$7,106,426.91 to the South African National Treasury on 6 February, the same day seven of the grant’s sub-recipients delivered an open letter to Minister of Health, Aaron Motsoaledi, pleading for intervention to bring the Fund’s “life-threatening delays” to an end.

    #sida #afrique_du_sud

    • précision de #TAC

      The headline (...) have left you with an optimistic impression if you did not read the remainder of the article.
      Only $7.1m of the over $12m owed to the Round 6 sub-recipients for July to December 2011 (which includes TAC) has been released. Also, as of the time of writing, the money is still not in the TAC bank account. Furthermore, we have not received our tranche for January 2012.

  • Remarks By Stephen Lewis, on international AIDS politics
    http://allafrica.com/stories/201112060911.html

    right at the moment when we know, irrefutably, that we can defeat this pandemic, we’re sucker-punched at the Global Fund.

    What’s a sucker punch? It’s when a boxer in the ring gets a punch below the belt that he doesn’t see coming. No one expected a complete cancellation of Round Eleven, with new money unavailable for implementation until 2014.

    It’s just the latest blow in a long list of betrayals on the part of the donor countries, in this instance the Europeans in particular. I’ve heard from several people that the politics of the Global Fund meeting in Accra two weeks ago, when the decision was made, were not just complicated, but amounted to miserable internecine warfare. Certain governments on the Board of the Global Fund simply discredited themselves. They give a soiled name to the principle of international solidarity. The Chair of the Board, in a remarkably convoluted effort, tried to explain things in a press release. He would have done far better to remain silent.

    The decision on the part of the donor countries is unforgiveable. (...)

    I asked: “Do they regard Africa as a territorial piece of geographic obsolescence? Do they regard Africans themselves as casually expendable? Is it because the women and children of Africa are not comparable in the eyes of western governments to the women and children of Europe and North America? Is it because Africans are black and unacknowledged racism is at play? Is it because a fighter jet is worth so much more than human lives? Is it because defense budgets are more worthy of protection in an economic downturn than millions of human beings?”

    et sur l’#Afrique_du_sud

    I’m thrilled with the turnaround in South Africa. The dramatic roll-out of treatment is nothing short of miraculous. But I remember all those years of denialism, and not a single voice at the most senior levels of the United Nations-Under-Secretaries-General, the Secretary-General himself. Not one of them said publicly to Thabo Mbeki, “You’re killing your people”. Oh, to be sure, it was said in private by everyone. They took Thabo Mbeki aside and begged him to reverse course. He didn’t budge an inch. Around him, in every community in South Africa, and in communities throughout a continent heavily influenced by South Africa, were the killing fields of AIDS. As we come to this thrilling moment of progress, I can’t forget the millions who died on Thabo Mbeki’s watch, while those who should have confronted him before the eyes of the world stood mute.

    #sida #global_fund

  • Should we call it murder? - Stephen Lewis
    http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/594745/ee0f811cb8/1468555807/955b05c498

    I’m not allowed to characterize the desolate sabotage of the Global Fund as murder, but in the private depths of my soul, I really believe it is murder. There, I’ve said it. But rather than be discarded as some rhetorical extremist, let me simply assert that we have no right, by any measure of human decency, to allow people to die, in huge numbers, unnecessarily.

    (...)

    In the reckless haste to coddle the multinationals, global public health has taken a merciless hit.
     
    And here’s something else to think about. Not a one of these companies has given a direct nickel to the coffers of the Global Fund, despite endless requests that they do so. And BP, Shell and Exxon Mobil are all members of the Global Business Coalition Health (GBCHealth), successor to the Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS.
     
    But if it’s too much to ask that capitalism re-direct priorities, there is one avenue that has been embraced by virtually all of Europe with the exception of the United Kingdom. It’s called the Financial Transactions Tax, or Robin Hood Tax in the vernacular.

    #sida #global_fund

  • Jeffrey Sachs: Washington Leaves Millions to Die
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-sachs/washington-leaves-million_b_1112746.html

    The wonder of our world is that scientific knowledge is now so powerful that we can save millions of children, mothers, and fathers from killer diseases each year at little cost. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria has mobilized that knowledge over the past decade to save more than 7 million lives and to protect the health of hundreds of millions more. Yet now the #Global_Fund is under mortal threat because of budget cuts approved by President Obama and the Congress.

    Reorienting less than 1 day’s military budget to help save millions of lives (in conjunction with the efforts of other countries) is not only a great humanitarian step but also the most cost-effective step we can take for our own security.

    #sida #santé #paludisme #tb