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Relief as Global Fund grants approval
PlusNews
November 12, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81435
After a week
of drama and suspense, HIV/AIDS activists in Zimbabwe welcomed with
relief the decision by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria to award the country a US$169 million grant.
The Global Fund has approved
three grants for Zimbabwe over a two-year period: US$79 million
for HIV/AIDS; US$63 million for malaria and US$27 million for tuberculosis.
The Geneva-based organisation
said these grants could be extended up to five years, depending
on the performance and results of the approved grants during the
first two years. Zimbabwe had applied for about US$500 million for
the three diseases, and also to help resuscitate the country's ailing
health sector.
Last week the
country's funding proposal hung in the balance after the government
failed to meet
the deadline of Thursday 6 November to return over US$7 million
to the Fund. Some of the money was held by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
(RBZ) but was distributed "erratically and only partially",
which had affected the implementation of programmes, the Fund said.
Michel Kazatchkine, executive
director of the Fund, had warned that no future grants would be
awarded until the remaining US$7.3 million had been transferred
to commercial banks by the due date.
Although the RBZ eventually
paid the outstanding amount on Friday 7 November, the Global Fund
had warned it would not approve any new grants for Zimbabwe until
it had received assurance that its money would be safe.
Jon Liden, the Fund's
head of communications, told IRIN/PlusNews that although the board
had approved Zimbabwe's application, no grant agreement would be
signed until the funding body had made sure that the money would
reach the intended beneficiaries.
"Approving the grants
is just the first step. Now, negotiations about a grant agreement
will begin, and the Global Fund has made it clear that no grant
agreement will be signed with Zimbabwe until we can guarantee that
the money going to the recipients of these grants can reach them
without delay or diversion," said Liden.
"For the new grants,
it normally takes six to twelve months between Board approval and
grant signing, but it may take longer unless we can quickly find
satisfactory ways of channelling the money in a safe way, as well
as making sure all the recipients of the grants are of high quality."
Zimbabwe's HIV/AIDS community
welcomed news of the grant, but there was concern that the conditions
imposed by the Global Fund, however justified, would further delay
grants to beneficiaries who were often in dire need as a result
of the worsening national health and HIV/AIDS crises.
The Harare and Parirenyatwa
hospitals, Zimbabwe's largest health institutions, recently shut
down when staff downed tools in protest against poor salaries and
working conditions. The health professionals argued that the hospitals
had become "death traps" because there were no drugs or
medicines, and essential life-saving medical equipment did not work.
Dr Douglas Gwatidzo,
chairman of Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR) told IRIN/PlusNews that the
approval of the Global Fund grant was a "welcome relief"
because the country's health resources were running low, but he
feared the money might take "forever" to reach the people
who needed it.
"The conditions
put in place by the Global Fund are understandable after the conduct
of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe; clearly there is a strong element
of mistrust," he commented.
HIV/AIDS activist
Sebastian Chinhaire, a member of the Zimbabwe
National Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (ZNNP), said
the delay in the grant signing could mean death for many HIV-positive
people.
"As we speak, the
government-run antiretroviral (ARV) drugs programme that supports
at least a 100,000 people is struggling to keep afloat. Recently,
the opportunistic infections clinics at Harare and Parirenyatwa
hospitals closed down because there were shortages of drugs."
While Zimbabwe puts its
house in order with the Global Fund, reduced donor funding means
at least 100,000 people in state-funded ARV programmes face an uncertain
future; on top of this, a further estimated 320,000 HIV-positive
people are in urgent need of the life-prolonging drugs.
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