House Votes to Spend $50 Billion Over Next Five
Years to Fight AIDS, Other Global Illness
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
WASHINGTON — The House voted Wednesday to triple to more than $10 billion a year U.S. humanitarian spending on fighting AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in Africa and other stricken areas of the world.
About $41 billion of the $50 billion over five years would be devoted to AIDS, significantly expanding a program credited with saving more than 1 million lives in Africa alone in the largest U.S. investment ever against a single disease.
Every day another 6,000 people are infected with the HIV virus, said House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman, D-Calif. “We have a moral imperative to act and to act decisively,” he said.
The House voted 308-116 to extend and broaden the scope of the $15 billion President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief that President Bush promoted and Congress enacted in 2003. It has been hailed as a noteworthy foreign policy success of the Bush presidency.
The White House, which backs the House bill, said the program is supporting anti-retroviral treatment for about 1.45 million people and is on track to meet its goals of backing treatment for 2 million, preventing 7 million new infections and providing care for 10 million, including orphans and vulnerable children.
Lee ADDS: We could stop MALARIA dead in its tracks by resuming DDT spraying! The numbers od deaths to humans far outweighs the negative effects on wildlife! This would be a start!
