In a bid to calm the nerves at the16th International
Conference on AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections in Africa in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia, the Global Fund Thursday moved to declare that it has taken
transitional funding mechanisms that will ensure continued treatment for people
living with AIDS.
Speaking at the final plenary session of the ICASA
conference, Dr Debrework Zewdre, deputy director, Global Fund for AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria said the Global Fund has enough money to cover all
existing rounds.
Dr Zewdre said the transition mechanism will bridge gaps
that may arise following reduced pledges and delayed payments by those who had
pledged.
Two weeks ago, Global Fund adopted exceptional measures to
suspend Round 11 but denied that the Global Fund is on demise.
While calling on the donors and African leaders to play
their part in funding the Global Fund, Dr Zewdre denied that the demise of the
Global Fund.
She disclosed that other than one donor (unnamed) who has
decided to decrease funding, none else has said they are going to decrease
funding.
On World AIDS Day, US President Obama issued a strong call
to action to the global community to join the United States in giving the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria the funds it was promised.
He urged for continued reforms of the Global Fund processes
so that investments will yield even greater health returns in the future.
According to Obama, the Global Fund remains on track to
support more than $8 billion in grant renewals and new grant commitments
between now and the end of 2013. “These commitments will allow countries to
continue and, in many cases, continue to scale up successful programs to fight
AIDS, TB, and malaria,” he said adding that the Global Fund will remain a major
financier of the fight against the three diseases.
News from the Global Fund’s Board indicate heightened
activities to transform the Fund’s grant making process.
The reform process is to allow the Fund to transition to a
more flexible, sustainable and predictable funding model that will ensure that
resources go to high-impact interventions and to people who need the help the
most.
The Board has also taken steps to better target Global Fund
resources on countries with the greatest need and least ability to pay.
This means that G20 countries with Upper Middle Income
status and a less-than-extreme disease burden will no longer be eligible for
grant renewals and that at least 55% of Global Fund resources will be directed
to Low Income countries.
According to Obama, no countries will be forced to suspend
any essential services as a result of the decision to make Round 11 a
transition round.” Existing grantees with grants expiring between January 1,
2012 and March 31, 2014, may apply for up to two years of additional funding if
necessary to ensure continuation of essential prevention, treatment and care
programs currently financed by the Global Fund,” he said.
“The problem faced by the Global Fund however is not of
pledges but that those who make pledges delay in paying up. “Most are paying in
the last quarter of the year,” said Dr Zewdre.
She assured that the Global Fund has enough resources to
cover all rounds, all on treatment will stay on treatment.
That notwithstanding, she added that the estimated cost of
supporting patients will decline slightly by 10 percent by 2020, but will still
be above USD1.7 billion per year that is currently used to fund anti-retroviral
drugs.
The repercussions will be huge. It is expected that
mortality will rise rapidly should treatment be discontinued. This translates
to 5 million people in Africa who currently need treatment are on the waiting
list and will be made to suffer more if funding delays.
Currently, the entire continent is covering only 49 per cent
of people who need to be on treatment
AIDS has killed over 15 million Africans since 1981 and many
more have been affected.
Meanwhile, HIV/AIDS civil society groups Thursday
interrupted plenary session on the final day of the 16th International
Conference on AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections in Africa in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia to petition the African governments and the African Union to
consider as an emergency the need to develop a clear time bound health and HIV
strategy for domestic finance sources.
They also demanded that the donors honour their pledges
towards Round 11 funding.
“Now more than ever, we ask our African governments to play
a proactive role in funding health and HIV. It is not time to rest, it time to
move with the response,” the civil society told the gathering.
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