U.S. pledges $526 million aid in 2017 to Tanzania to fight AIDS
The United States on Thursday approved $526 million aid to
Tanzania over the coming year to expand the roll out of life-prolonging
anti-retroviral drugs to people infected with HIV, the virus that causes
AIDS.Some 1.4 million Tanzanians are estimated to be living with HIV in the
nation of around 50 million people, with about 850,000 of them currently on
anti-retrovirals (ARVs)."This support will bring the total number of
Tanzanians on HIV treatment up to 1.2 million," the U.S. Embassy in
Tanzania said in a statement.The funds were donated through the U.S.
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the world's largest
provider of AIDS-fighting medicine.
The programme has been credited with saving millions of
lives around the world.The financial assistance represents a 12 percent increase
over last year’s budget and will also support HIV testing for 8.6 million
Tanzanians and provide treatment to an estimated 360,000 people who newly test
positive with the virus.The funds will also support the care and treatment of
orphans and vulnerable children and voluntary medical male circumcision to
further prevent HIV transmission.
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