/ 29 January 2008

Bush asks for more money to fight Aids in Africa

United States President George Bush on Monday called for Congress to double the money going to a programme combating HIV/Aids and malaria in Africa.

Bush proposed a $30-billion programme over five years to combat the pandemics ahead of a planned trip to the continent next month.

Bush first launched his five-year, $15-billion Emergency Plan for Aids Relief in 2003, and said that the programme had so far helped change behaviour and treated 1,4-million people.

”We are working to cut by half the number of malaria-related deaths in 15 African nations,” Bush said in his annual State of the Union address. ”We can bring healing and hope to many more.”

He called on the Congress to support a new food-aid plan that would purchase produce directly from farmers in developing nations. The programme would ”build up local agriculture and help break the cycle of famine”.

Bush will travel to Africa next month on a five-nation tour to review progress under the Aids-malaria programme and to encourage democratic development. Bush is to make stops in Benin, Tanzania, Rwanda, Ghana and Liberia during the February 15 to 21 trip. — Sapa-dpa