Kenya has donated Sh500 million to the Global Fund Against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, making it one of the highest contributors from Africa.

Do you have a lead on a newsworthy story? Share news tips with us here at Hivisasa!

The announcement was made by Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed who spoke on behalf of President Uhuru Kenyatta at the Global Fund Replenishment conference in Montreal, Canada.

“The Global Fund has played a major role in supporting Kenya’s success in combating HIV/Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria over the years,” read CS Amina.

The donation by the government is part of the concept of ‘giving to receive’ in which countries that benefit from the global fund also make contributions.

According to PSCU, in the next three years, Kenya is expected to receive more than Sh34 billion from the Global Fund.

In the statement, the President said that the global fund had made a huge difference in saving the life of millions of people all over the world.

Kenya runs the 7th largest Global Fund portfolio and its donation is part of its commitment to ensure the fund achieves the goal of combating the three diseases.

The fund aims to ensure that by 2030 AIDS, TB and malaria will no longer be a public health threat.

The President said the spirit of true partnership can indeed be the difference between life and death for millions of people and of prosperity or poverty for nations.

He said a global commitment could result in averting 28 million new HIV infections and 21 millions AIDS related deaths.

“It is in the spirit of solidarity and shared responsibility that the Government of Kenya has pledged Sh500 million towards the 5th Global Fund Replenishment, which shows an increase from Sh200 million pledged and honored during the last cycle,” said the President.

Kenya has invested more than $54 million (Sh5.4 billion) in the last two financial years as its contribution and counter fund to the Global Fund and other partners’ investment in AIDS, TB and Malaria interventions.

Kenya has 950,000 people living with HIV enrolled in life long anti-retroviral treatment, and who will receive ARVs for the next 70 years, if a cure is not found.

Over the last decade, a total of 1.2 million Kenyans have been diagnosed with TB and one million treated successfully and the number of TB cases has dropped from 120,000 to 80,000 in the last 2 years.

This has averted over 500,000 deaths and placed Kenya as global leader in TB control.

In the case of Malaria, Government funding supported by the Global Fund has enabled scaled-ip intervention to reduce the burden.