Posted by
Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen on Wednesday, April 02, 2008 9:17:45 PM
Reuters: U.S. House passes big hike in global AIDS funds
U.S. House passes big hike in global AIDS funds
Wed 2 Apr 2008, 19:13 GMT
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON, April 2 (Reuters) - The U.S.
House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a bill to more than triple
spending to fight AIDS in Africa and other parts of the world, one of
President George W. Bush's foremost foreign aid quests.
The measure, a bipartisan compromise backed
by the White House and passed by a vote of 308 to 116, calls for $50
billion in funding for AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria programs over the
next five years. It marks a big hike from the $15 billion authorized
over the first five years of the initiative.
Bush had initially proposed doubling the program to $30 billion. The Democratic-led House boosted it to $50 billion.
A similar bill is heading toward passage in the Democratic-led Senate.
The initiative aims to prevent infection by
the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS, treat people
already infected and care for children left as orphans by AIDS.
"There is a moral imperative to combat this epidemic," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat.
The White House said the current program is supporting life-saving treatment for 1.45 million people.
The program launched by Bush in 2003
provides support programs and drugs in 15 countries, 12 in Africa plus
Vietnam, Guyana and Haiti. The new bill would add 14 more countries in
the Caribbean basin, and an amendment approved by the House would add
three more African countries.
Bill opponents said it was simply too expensive, and that there were pressing needs at home that need to be addressed.
The bill would discard a current
requirement criticized by some Democrats and AIDS activists that a
third of all HIV prevention funds be spent on sexual abstinence
education. It instead calls for "balanced funding" for abstinence,
fidelity and condom programs.
There are 33 million people worldwide
infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, with two-thirds of them
in sub-Saharan Africa, according to U.N. estimates.
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen,
a Florida Republican, said the bill would save millions of lives around
the world and help maintain stability in a key region of the world.
"The program that we are authorizing
today ... is now recognized as perhaps the most successful foreign
assistance program of the United States of America since the Marshall
Plan," Ros-Lehtinen said, referring to the costly U.S. plan to rebuild
Europe after World War II.
Bush sees his efforts against AIDS and
malaria as foreign policy successes in a presidency dominated by the
unpopular war in Iraq. During a trip to Africa in February, Bush was
given a hero's welcome in part for U.S. AIDS and malaria programs.
The White House calls the anti-AIDS
initiative the largest commitment ever by any nation for an
international health initiative dedicated to a single disease.
New Jersey Democratic Rep. Donald Payne said the initiative will go down as Bush's single most important achievement.
But opponents said it costs too much. "It
is terrible that millions of Africans are suffering AIDS. But we cannot
afford such totally irrational generosity. This is benevolence gone
wild," said California Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher.
"We can't take care of our own veterans
when they come home from the war. We can't take care of our elderly. We
have people who can't take care of their own health needs and are at
risk of losing their homes," Rohrabacher added. "We have big hearts.
But we need to use our brains."
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