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Sudan War Exacerbates Risk Of Cholera And Malaria: UNICEF
Sudan War Exacerbates Risk Of Cholera And Malaria: UNICEF

Scoop

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • Scoop

Sudan War Exacerbates Risk Of Cholera And Malaria: UNICEF

May 2025 In a report released Wednesday, UNICEF highlighted the growing threat of cholera in the war-torn country, with more than 7,700 cases and 185 associated deaths reported in Khartoum State alone since January 2025. Alarmingly, over 1,000 cases have affected children under the age of five. Since the onset of conflict in April 2023, three million people have been forced to flee their homes, displaced internally and across the region. Returning to homes without water While improved access to parts of Khartoum State has enabled more than 34,000 people to return since January, many are coming back to homes that have been severely damaged and lack access to basic water and sanitation services. Recent attacks on power infrastructure in Khartoum State have compounded the crisis, disrupting water supplies and forcing families to collect water from unsafe, contaminated sources. This significantly increases the risk of cholera, particularly in densely populated areas such as displacement camps. UNICEF has implemented a multi-pronged approach to the crisis, including distributing household water treatment chemicals, delivering over 1.6 million oral cholera vaccines, supplying cholera treatment kits, and more. 'Each day, more children are exposed to this double threat of cholera and malnutrition, but both are preventable and treatable, if we can reach children in time,' said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF Representative for Sudan. Malaria and new prevention efforts Also on Wednesday, UNICEF launched a partnership with the Sudanese government's health ministry and The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to distribute nearly 15.6 million insecticide-treated bed nets to prevent the spread of malaria among vulnerable families across Sudan, along with 500,000 additional nets for antenatal and immunization facilities. The campaign aims to protect 28 million Sudanese across 14 states. As with cholera, ongoing conflict and displacement have created conditions conducive to the spread of malaria. Overcrowded and unsanitary living conditions, coupled with the approaching rainy season, present a serious health risk to millions, particularly those returning to damaged communities. In addition, the initiative aims to bolster the availability of anti-malarial medications, rapid diagnostic tests, and investments in strengthening the healthcare system. Critical medical supplies reach West Darfur In a more positive development, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced Tuesday that El Geneina Hospital in West Darfur has received eight tonnes of medical supplies for nutrition, non-communicable diseases and mental health. The delivery, supported by the World Bank Africa, the Share Project, and the European Union, is expected to sustain the hospital's operations for six months, providing vital support to one of the regions hardest hit by the multiple escalating crises.

The Boom Years of Global Charity Are Over. What Comes Next?
The Boom Years of Global Charity Are Over. What Comes Next?

New York Times

time14-05-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

The Boom Years of Global Charity Are Over. What Comes Next?

Will anyone ever give like this again? When Bill and Melinda French Gates established their world-shaping Gates Foundation in 2000, you could say it marked the peak of a certain era of starry-eyed optimism among the world's private-jet elite. This month, when Bill Gates celebrated the foundation's 25th anniversary by announcing he was putting it on a glide path to closing, he pledged that he would be spending even more aggressively, distributing 99 percent of his astronomical wealth in just two decades. But the announcement looked nevertheless like a turning of the page, even a passing of the baton. I spoke with Gates about the decision over two days last month outside Palm Springs, Calif., and to me it felt like a trip in a time machine to a throwback era not so distant in years but disorientingly foreign in mood. Sometimes called the end of history, sometimes the time of globalization and sometimes the age of neoliberalism, that era was defined by new levels of extreme wealth, technocratic confidence in the human capacity to transform the world and a somewhat miraculous — and often underappreciated — wave of improvements in the lives of the least well off. One benefit of truly extreme wealth is that it allows one to sail into the future somewhat unperturbed by the choppiness of the cultural waters. But for someone tallying the achievements of a generation of global giving, it is hard not to worry about the direction of change and the way the winds are blowing. There were blind spots to that old worldview, to be sure, not to mention missteps and blunders when its evangelists brought the new developmental gospel to the front lines. In 2018, an evaluation determined that one of the Gates Foundation's central educational initiatives had been a failure — perhaps a sobering sign for future endeavors focused on artificial intelligence in schools. In 2021, the foundation funded an audit that concluded that its agricultural initiatives in Africa had been a mixed bag — a gentler critique than those that advocates on the ground had been making for years, both on the basis of limited returns and in explicitly anticolonialist terms. In the midst of the pandemic, Gates argued against releasing intellectual property to accelerate the global distribution of Covid shots, leaving shortfalls in the global south, which critics there called 'vaccine apartheid.' But the period also produced enormous dividends: huge improvements in extreme poverty globally, as well as maternal mortality and childhood death rates, to name just a few metrics. Western philanthropy was far from the sole driver of these gains; a large part of the poverty reduction, especially, took place in China. And yet just through its work with Gavi and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, two programs it also helped establish, the Gates Foundation has a plausible claim to helping save more than 80 million lives. That is an absolutely staggering achievement, one that places the Gateses in the philanthropic pantheon right next to the robber barons whose Gilded Age giving first inspired them. Not everyone saw this work as charitably as did globalization's leadership class, who sometimes cheered development philanthropies as a way of affirming the justice of a world system on whose top they proudly sat. After all, even as extreme poverty fell by three-quarters in what were often called the miraculous decades of the 1990s and the 2000s, the wealth gap between the world's poorest and the world's richest didn't decline; it ballooned, with the income gains flooding to the globe's top 10 percent hundreds of times as large as those going to the bottom 10 percent. As skeptics of foreign aid have been pointing out for quite a while, adjusted for inflation, the average income in sub-Saharan Africa has barely grown since 1970 — more than 50 years and several distinct lost decades ago. Developmental aid has probably produced as many cautionary tales as economic boom success stories, and to bring all the world's people out of poverty, the World Bank recently estimated, would take more than a century; to bring them up to the poverty level of rich nations would take far longer. 'G.D.P. is magic stuff,' Gates told me. 'But you also want your interventions to help out even before that growth kicks in.' And they have: Rates of childhood death and maternal mortality remain much higher among the world's poor than the world's rich, but each has also been cut roughly in half in just a few decades. Smallpox has been eradicated globally, and Guinea worm and polio appear to be on their way out. This isn't the work of one man or one couple or one foundation, however large. But that one foundation and its billions of dollars have played an outsize role. A decade ago, it would have been easy to look at those improvements and trust that the trends would continue wherever the growth rates or political currents went — the project of global health so deeply embedded in international institutions that it had begun to seem almost like the basic compensatory infrastructure of an outrageously unequal world. Today, it's less clear how interested the world's richest are in offering such compensation, with that infrastructure looking much less secure as a result. President George W. Bush's PEPFAR program to deliver H.I.V. treatment globally has been credited with saving an estimated 25 million lives, but instead of confirming its value beyond any public doubt, the opposite seems to have happened. In just a few months, the Trump administration's attack on U.S. foreign aid has already been blamed, by some trackers, for the needless deaths of more than 200,000 people abroad. In 2021, JD Vance called the Gates Foundation and its breed 'cancers on American society,' and Stephen Miller, a top adviser to President Trump, has criticized it for promoting 'the most hateful, toxic and Marxist ideologies.' You can even see some Trump-y accelerationist types mocking Gates online for having sold so much of his Microsoft stock, because holding onto it over the decades would have meant that he never had to relinquish the title of world's richest man — as though wealth itself would have been a more lasting monument than the millions of lives he saved. And what of global health? Last year, acknowledging that the boom years for progress had ended, Gates wondered publicly how long the slowdown would last. Now he describes his speed-run approach less in the language of shortfalls or crises than through the logic of opportunity. Others at the foundation talk in terms of imagining a future in which, by making enough progress toward its headline targets, the organization could also make itself unnecessary. Many in the developing world would like to imagine that, too, some of them for somewhat different reasons. But in the near term, the influence of the Gates Foundation isn't heading for a sunset but a sunrise. In recent years, the foundation has been the second largest donor to the World Health Organization. With the United States' withdrawal, it will become the largest single supporter of what is now a much more vulnerable institution. Probably the same pattern will repeat elsewhere: If we are genuinely entering a fallow period, the relative influence of the biggest donors will only grow. Already there are those asking, somewhat in desperation, why Gates isn't doing even more. And the years ahead do look fallow. The United States has been responsible for one-third of all funding for global health, and the cuts to basic science and R. & D. may prove just as gutting. For decades now, money flowed from the world's rich to the world's poor partly to meet fundamental needs that could not be met locally, and the world's exploding debt crisis has made the problem only more acute: Forty percent of the planet lives in places that spend more money paying interest on their debts than on health or education; the number of African countries where debts have passed 60 percent of G.D.P. has doubled in a decade; and it costs roughly 10 times as much to borrow money south of the Mediterranean as it does north of the Alps. Violence and warfare have grown globally, particularly across the poorer world, and relatedly, there are now nearly 200 million more people living with food insecurity than before the pandemic. Perhaps it isn't enough to torpedo comforting narratives of global progress or materially undermine all those global health gains. But if it looked for a time as though the turn of the millennium had initiated a new phase of developmental history, it's a lot less clear where things are heading next.

Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045
Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045

Dubai Eye

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • Dubai Eye

Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045

Bill Gates has pledged to give away almost his entire personal wealth in the next two decades and said the world's poorest would receive some $200 billion via his foundation at a time when governments worldwide are slashing international aid. He also hit out at Elon Musk, the world's richest man and a key figure in President Donald Trump's administration, accusing him of "killing the world's poorest children" with huge cuts to the United States aid budget. "The picture of the world's richest man killing the world's poorest children is not a pretty one," Gates told the Financial Times. The Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency has led to the decimation of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which has previously provided billions in funding for everything from vaccines for children to emergency food assistance. Gates and Musk once agreed over the role of the wealthy in giving away money, but have since clashed several times. Gates said he was speeding up plans to divest his fortune and close the Gates Foundation on December 31, 2045. "People will say a lot of things about me when I die, but I am determined that 'he died rich' will not be one of them," the 69-year-old billionaire Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist wrote in a post on his website. "There are too many urgent problems to solve for me to hold onto resources that could be used to help people." In an implicit rebuke to Trump's slashing of aid since returning to office in January, Gates' statement said he wanted to help stop newborn babies, children and mothers dying of preventable causes, end diseases like polio, malaria and measles, and reduce poverty. "It's unclear whether the world's richest countries will continue to stand up for its poorest people," Gates added, noting cuts from major donors including Britain and France alongside the United States, the world's biggest donor. Gates said that despite the foundation's deep pockets, progress would not be possible without government support. He praised the response to aid cuts in Africa, where some governments have reallocated budgets, but said that as an example polio would not be eradicated without US funding. Gates made the announcement on the foundation's 25th anniversary. He set up the organisation with his then-wife Melinda French Gates in 2000, and they were later joined by investor Warren Buffett. "I have come a long way since I was just a kid starting a software company with my friend from middle school," he said. Since inception, the foundation has given away $100 billion, helping to save millions of lives and backing initiatives like the vaccine group Gavi and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. It will close after it spends around 99 per cent of his personal fortune, Gates said. The founders originally expected the foundation to wrap up in the decades after their deaths. Gates, who is valued at around $108 billion today, expects the foundation to spend around $200 billion by 2045, with the final figure dependent on markets and inflation. The foundation is already a huge player in global health, with an annual budget that will reach $9 billion by 2026. It has faced criticism for its outsize power and influence in the field without the requisite accountability, including at the World Health Organisation. Gates himself was also subject to conspiracy theories, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gates has spoken to Trump several times in recent months on the importance of continued investment in global health. "I hope other wealthy people consider how much they can accelerate progress for the world's poorest if they increased the pace and scale of their giving, because it is such a profoundly impactful way to give back to society," Gates wrote.

Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045
Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045

ARN News Center

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • ARN News Center

Bill Gates to give away $200 billion by 2045

Bill Gates has pledged to give away almost his entire personal wealth in the next two decades and said the world's poorest would receive some $200 billion via his foundation at a time when governments worldwide are slashing international aid. He also hit out at Elon Musk, the world's richest man and a key figure in President Donald Trump's administration, accusing him of "killing the world's poorest children" with huge cuts to the United States aid budget. "The picture of the world's richest man killing the world's poorest children is not a pretty one," Gates told the Financial Times. The Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency has led to the decimation of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which has previously provided billions in funding for everything from vaccines for children to emergency food assistance. Gates and Musk once agreed over the role of the wealthy in giving away money, but have since clashed several times. Gates said he was speeding up plans to divest his fortune and close the Gates Foundation on December 31, 2045. "People will say a lot of things about me when I die, but I am determined that 'he died rich' will not be one of them," the 69-year-old billionaire Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist wrote in a post on his website. "There are too many urgent problems to solve for me to hold onto resources that could be used to help people." In an implicit rebuke to Trump's slashing of aid since returning to office in January, Gates' statement said he wanted to help stop newborn babies, children and mothers dying of preventable causes, end diseases like polio, malaria and measles, and reduce poverty. "It's unclear whether the world's richest countries will continue to stand up for its poorest people," Gates added, noting cuts from major donors including Britain and France alongside the United States, the world's biggest donor. Gates said that despite the foundation's deep pockets, progress would not be possible without government support. He praised the response to aid cuts in Africa, where some governments have reallocated budgets, but said that as an example polio would not be eradicated without US funding. Gates made the announcement on the foundation's 25th anniversary. He set up the organisation with his then-wife Melinda French Gates in 2000, and they were later joined by investor Warren Buffett. "I have come a long way since I was just a kid starting a software company with my friend from middle school," he said. Since inception, the foundation has given away $100 billion, helping to save millions of lives and backing initiatives like the vaccine group Gavi and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. It will close after it spends around 99 per cent of his personal fortune, Gates said. The founders originally expected the foundation to wrap up in the decades after their deaths. Gates, who is valued at around $108 billion today, expects the foundation to spend around $200 billion by 2045, with the final figure dependent on markets and inflation. The foundation is already a huge player in global health, with an annual budget that will reach $9 billion by 2026. It has faced criticism for its outsize power and influence in the field without the requisite accountability, including at the World Health Organisation. Gates himself was also subject to conspiracy theories, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gates has spoken to Trump several times in recent months on the importance of continued investment in global health. "I hope other wealthy people consider how much they can accelerate progress for the world's poorest if they increased the pace and scale of their giving, because it is such a profoundly impactful way to give back to society," Gates wrote.

Bill Gates pledges to give away nearly all wealth by 2045, blasts Elon Musk for ‘killing world's poorest'
Bill Gates pledges to give away nearly all wealth by 2045, blasts Elon Musk for ‘killing world's poorest'

Mint

time08-05-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

Bill Gates pledges to give away nearly all wealth by 2045, blasts Elon Musk for ‘killing world's poorest'

Bill Gates announced on Thursday (May 8) that he plans to give away almost his entire personal fortune over the next two decades, pledging that his foundation will distribute around $200 billion to aid the world's poorest. The move comes as international aid budgets face severe cuts by major donor governments. In a sharp criticism of Elon Musk and the current US administration under President Donald Trump, Bill Gates accused Musk of devastating consequences for vulnerable populations. 'The picture of the world's richest man killing the world's poorest children is not a pretty one,' Gates told the Financial Times, referring to drastic reductions in the US aid budget led by Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. Gates highlighted that the cuts have severely weakened the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which has historically provided funding for critical health and humanitarian programs worldwide. 'There are too many urgent problems to solve for me to hold onto resources that could be used to help people,' Gates said in a statement marking the Gates Foundation's 25th anniversary. Gates confirmed that the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will close on December 31, 2045, after spending about 99% of his fortune. 'People will say a lot of things about me when I die, but I am determined that 'he died rich' will not be one of them,' Gates wrote on his website. The foundation, established in 2000 with his then-wife Melinda French Gates, has so far donated $100 billion, supporting life-saving initiatives such as Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Gates emphasised his commitment to addressing key global health challenges despite setbacks from donor nations. 'It's unclear whether the world's richest countries will continue to stand up for its poorest people,' he warned, citing recent aid cuts from Britain, France, and the US. He stressed the importance of government partnerships, saying, 'Polio will not be eradicated without US funding.' Gates urged fellow billionaires to consider accelerating their charitable giving. 'I hope other wealthy people consider how much they can accelerate progress for the world's poorest if they increased the pace and scale of their giving, because it is such a profoundly impactful way to give back to society,' he wrote.

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