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Global Fund Shifts Resources to Poorest Nations Amid Aid Cuts

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor

Global Fund Shifts Focus to Poorest Nations as Aid Declines

LONDON⁤ – The‍ Global‌ fund ⁣to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is reallocating resources to prioritize the world’s most vulnerable countries as international⁢ aid commitments⁣ falter, its chief executive announced Friday. The move aims to mitigate the impact of funding cuts, especially from ⁤major donor governments like the United States, and prevent widening health inequalities globally.

The Global⁤ Fund is ​currently seeking $18 billion for its ‍next three-year funding cycle‍ (2027-2029), but faces headwinds due to ⁢reduced donor contributions. The organization has already cautioned some nations about potential reductions in existing grants for 2025-2026.

“We’re ‌skewing our resources even more to the very poorest countries… We are ​particularly concerned about places ‍where⁢ there is really no alternative,” said Peter Sands, ‍chief executive of the Global Fund, specifically citing countries ⁤like Sudan, currently grappling with a humanitarian crisis stemming from ongoing civil war. ⁣

Sands noted that while‍ some low-income countries are increasing domestic health funding, others lack the capacity ⁤to offset⁣ international aid reductions. “There are some parts of the ‍world ​which are suffering from a kind of ⁤vicious combination of poverty, ⁤conflict, climate change and disease, and the idea that… we can leave those parts of their ⁤world to their own devices, is morally‌ repugnant,” he stated.

The declaration comes​ alongside the release of the Global Fund’s 2025 results report,‍ which highlights⁣ record access to prevention and treatment tools for AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria in 2023. Since its⁤ inception in‌ 2002, the partnership reports saving 70 ​million lives.

However, Sands warned that progress is threatened by funding shortfalls. The Global Fund has alerted ⁣countries to a potential average 11% cut to current grants, due to a $1.4 billion gap in pledged donor funding for 2024-2026.

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