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ZIMBABWE:
Global Fund turns down application on technical grounds
PlusNews
July 29, 2004
http://www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp?ReportID=3710
JOHANNESBURG
- The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has dismissed
claims that "politics" were behind a decision to reject Zimbabwe's
US $218 million application, forcing the country to shelve its plans
to scale up HIV/AIDS treatment.
A spokesman
for the Global Fund, Tim Clark, confirmed on Thursday that the country's
proposal was turned down for "technical reasons", but stressed that
the decision "had nothing to do with political considerations".
"Zimbabwe's
application, like all the others, was assessed by an independent
board of disease experts who found several technical shortcomings.
To suggest that the Global Fund has made a decision based on political
merit is ridiculous. After all, the Fund has worked with countries
such as Sudan and North Korea," Clark told PlusNews.
Clark was responding
to comments made by David Parirenyatwa, Zimbabwe's Minister of Health
and Child Welfare, who accused the Fund of political bias.
"These are the
sanctions that anti-government organisations and the [opposition]
MDC [Movement for Democratic Change] are calling for, and this has
resulted in a humanitarian proposal being turned down," Parirenyatwa
reportedly told the independent Standard newspaper.
Zimbabwe is
one of the countries hardest hit by the AIDS pandemic, with an estimated
adult prevalence rate of 24.6 percent.
AIDS activists
expressed disappointment over the Global Fund's decision to exclude
Zimbabwe, citing the already limited resources available to tackle
the disease.
Coordinator
of the Zimbabwe AIDS network, Kate Mhambi, told PlusNews that the
country would have to look "inwards" for funds if it hoped to sustain
its fledgling anti-AIDS treatment rollout.
"There were
plans to scale up ARV [antiretroviral] therapy treatment, but it
seems as if these plans will have to be shelved. It is still unclear
what the reasons are behind the Global Fund's rejection, but we
do hope that it had nothing to do with politics. Humanitarian concerns
should be completely separated from political issues."
Mhambi noted
that ARVs were currently administered at four major health institutions,
but without the support of international donors it was unlikely
that the government would have the capacity to expand treatment
programmes.
Clark said Zimbabwe
had two options: either the country could appeal the Global Fund
decision, or "go back to the drawing board and correct some of the
technical glitches in its original application".
Previous applications
for HIV/AIDS and malaria prevention programmes had been approved
and there were "positive signs" that Zimbabwe would receive the
second tranche of a US $9 million grant to support anti-malaria
efforts in the country.
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