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Pledge $1 billion vs. AIDS, TB and malaria, China urged

Source:AIDS Healthcare Foundation Release Date:2013-10-23 170
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AIDS protesters worldwide demand that China step up its commitment to ‘Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria’

WASHINGTON, DC – AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, is spearheading a series of US and global protests targeting the Government of the People’s Republic of China to demand that it step up its commitment on global AIDS and pledge $1 billion to Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria. Between October 23 and October 25, protests will take place in front of the Chinese Embassy in Washington, DC and its consulates in four other US cities (New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco & Houston) as well as in a dozen foreign countries (Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Guatemala; Kenya, South Africa, Uganda, Zambia; Cambodia, India; the Netherlands and Ukraine). At the protests, AIDS advocates will carry banners and signs reading “China, Pay Your Fair Share on Global AIDS!” in both English and Chinese.

Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria is a program funded by wealthy nations that is designed to provide financial assistance to developing countries that lack the resources to fight diseases and build up medical infrastructures. Since the founding of the Global Fund in 2002, China has contributed a mere $25 million to the program, while countries with far smaller economies, such as Japan and Germany have contributed a combined total of over $3.5 billion, AHF said in a statement.


“As the world’s second largest economy, China clearly has the resources to contribute far more to the Global Fund and the worldwide fight against AIDS,” said Terri Ford, chief of Global Advocacy and Policy for AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “Beyond that, China should contribute because it is the right thing to do. A contribution of one billion dollars that we are asking them to make would amount to just one percent of what China spent on the 2008 Olympics and the 2010 Shanghai World Expo—money that would go a long way toward providing lifesaving treatment and care to millions of people the Global Fund serves.”

AHF spearheaded similar protests targeting China in 2010. Over the ten years prior, China—the world’s second largest economy—received nearly $1 billion ($940M) from the Fund (and up to that point had contributed just $16 million). Over those same years, the United States contributed $5.1 billion to the Fund—more than 28% of all contributions to the Fund.

"Since our initial China protests back in 2010, the Chinese government—at one time one of the largest recipients of Global Fund money—has at least stopped taking money from the Fund,” AHF president Michael Weinstein said in the statement. “Fortunately, that money can now go to countries in desperate need but that have far fewer resources. However, we still believe that the Chinese government should be showing greater leadership on HIV/AIDS and it should be shouldering far greater financial responsibility in helping to combat the global AIDS epidemic. Through these worldwide protests, we are saying, ‘China, Pay Your Fair Share on Global AIDS!’ ” 

“China currently has over $2.5 trillion dollars in foreign currency reserves. It spent over $40 billion to host the 2008 Summer Olympics, and over $58 billion to hold the 2010 World Exposition, said Tom Myers, AHF chief of Public Affairs and general counsel, who is based in Washington. “China is a wealthy countNike Air Max

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