Bill Gates' to spend $50m fighting Ebola outbreak
Gates Foundation make sits largest ever pledge to a humanitarian crisis to help fight against deadly Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
announced Wednesday that it will spend $50 million – on top of $10
million already committed – to support emergency response to the Ebola
outbreak in West Africa, marking the group's largest donation to a
humanitarian effort.
"It became clear
to us over the last 7 to 10 days that the pace and scope of the
epidemic was increasing significantly," Chris Elias, president of global
development for the world's largest charitable foundation, said.
The
Seattle-based foundation said the money will go to the United Nations,
the World Health Organization, the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and international organisations involved in fighting
transmission of the virus.
The money
will be used to purchase supplies and to develop vaccines, therapies and
better diagnostic tools. The foundation wants to help stop the outbreak
as well as accelerate development treatments and improve prevention.
Mr
Elias said they have been talking to the foundation's partners around
the world to assess the best use of its dollars and could not say yet
how much would be spent on the emergency response and how much on
research and development.
"One of our key advantages is flexibility," he said.Global health and development dominate the work of the foundation, which has given away $30 billion since 1997. The foundation formed by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and his wife reported an endowment worth $40 billion, as of March 2014.
The foundation was particularly influenced by the request on Friday by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for $600 million to fight the Ebola outbreak.
Ki-Moon said efforts in the next few weeks would be essential to stopping the virus that has killed more than 2,000 people in Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.
The foundation had previously committed more than $10 million on emergency operations, treatment and research. Of that money, $5 million went to the World Health Organization for emergency operations and research and development.
Another $5 million went to the US Fund for UNICEF to support efforts in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea to purchase medical supplies, coordinate response efforts and spread information.
Some of the $50 million will support strengthening existing health care systems in the countries affected by the outbreak, the foundation said.
Edited by Steve Wilson
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