<br><span class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Vern Weitzel</b> <<a href="mailto:vern.weitzel@gmail.com">vern.weitzel@gmail.com</a>><br>crossposted from: "[health-vn discussion group]" <a href="mailto:health-vn@anu.edu.au">health-vn@anu.edu.au</a><br>
<br></span>The question of how to fill an estimated $4 billion funding gap in the United<br>Nations-backed initiative that helps countries fight AIDS, tuberculosis and<br>malaria needs to be urgently addressed, donors at a meeting in the Spanish city<br>
of Cáceres stressed today, as they wrapped up a review of resource needs.<br><br><"<a href="http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/">http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/</a>">The Global Fund estimates that donor<br>
funding for the period 2008-2010 stands at $9.5 billion, $4 billion short of the<br>expected demand of at least $13.5 billion.<br><br>“In view of the funding gap and the impact of a global economic crisis on the<br>developing world, the Global Fund looks forward to how leaders of G-20 [Group of<br>
20 most industrialized] countries address this situation at their summit in<br>London on 2 April,”<br><br>The Group of Eight (G-8) leaders will also address the same<br>challenge when they meet in La Maddalena, Italy, in July.<br>
<br>Delegates gathered in Spain for the two-day Mid-Term Review meeting of the<br>Global Fund’s Second Voluntary Replenishment process said much of the additional<br>resources needed by the Fund would have to come from donors who have committed<br>
to increasing their official development assistance (ODA) budgets in order to<br>meet development financing targets set at a international conference in<br>Monterrey in 2002.<br><br>The participants, representing 28 donor countries and foundations, also called<br>
on the Global Fund to step up efforts to seek new government donors and attract<br>more private sector contributions, according to a news release issued by the Fund.<br><br>Several donors indicated that they would soon consider making additional<br>
contributions in response to the success achieved by Global Fund programmes. The<br>last two years have seen reductions in mortality in a number of countries for<br>AIDS and malaria, and a continued fall in global TB prevalence that was first<br>
noted in 2004.<br><br>“We are now affecting the course of these three epidemics. In the case of<br>malaria, in particular, we are on a trajectory to achieve universal access to<br>bed nets by 2011 and have reason to be hopeful the Millennium Development Goal<br>
for malaria can actually be reached,” said Mr. Kazatchkine, referring to one of<br>several development targets set by world leaders in 2000.<br><br>