World Health Organisation receives $1b in pledges

FILE PHOTO

The World Health Organisation said it received pledges worth $700 million (AED 2.5 billion) for its 2025-2028 budget at a event in Berlin on Monday, in addition to $300 million (AED 1.1 billion) already pledged by the European and African Unions.

"The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that when health is at risk, everything is at risk," WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at the event. "Investments in WHO are therefore investments not only in protecting and promoting health, but also in more equitable, more stable and more secure societies and economies."

Germany said it would provide at least 360 million euros ($392.47 million). It and the United States are the biggest country donors to the Geneva-based organization.

"Recently, just a handful of countries have provided large amounts of funding," German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said. "It would be better for us to spread the responsibility across many more shoulders."

"Every contribution counts – no matter how small."

WHO members agreed two years ago to overhaul its funding model which has been described as "fundamentally rotten" due to its over-reliance on the whims of donors.

The agreement means obligatory fees should rise to up to 50 per cent of the budget by 2030-2031 from just 16 per cent in recent years.

More from International News

  • Russian airport suspend fights

    Russia's Kazan airport has temporarily halted flight arrivals and departures, Russia's aviation watchdog Rosaviatsia said via the Telegram messaging app on Saturday, following a Ukrainian drone attack on the city.

  • Driver arrested after ramming German Christmas market

    A driver rammed a car into a large crowd of revellers at a Christmas market in central Germany on Friday evening, killing at least two people and injuring more than 60 before he was arrested, authorities said.

  • UN condemns killing of WPF staff in Sudan

    António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, condemned the killing of three World Food Programme (WFP) staff members in Sudan on 19th December, when the agency’s field office in Yabus, in Blue Nile State, was hit by aerial bombardment.

  • UNRWA call to Sweden to reinstate funding

    Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), described Sweden's decision to stop funding the agency in 2025 as disappointing, stating that it comes at the worst time for Palestinian refugees.

Coming Up