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Climate change, AIDS top priorities for aid agency
30 Jan 2007 17:14:13 GMT
Source: Reuters

GENEVA, Jan 30 (Reuters) - The world's largest disaster relief agency appealed on Tuesday for nearly $300 million in funding for 2007, some 67 percent more than last year, to help countries prepare for climate change and fight AIDS.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said that climate change, which scientists say will bring more extreme weather, along with more frequent flooding and hurricanes, posed the gravest threat to poorest countries.

"The people most affected by climate change will be the world's most vulnerable ... the elderly, the disabled and the poorest of the poor," said the Federation's Secretary-General Markku Niskala in a statement.

"It is crucial that we invest heavily in making communities stronger and more resilient," he said.

The annual appeal includes some $50 million for its work to combat AIDS in southern Africa. The disease is expected to kill more people over the next decade than all wars and natural disasters in the past 50 years, it said.

In southern Africa, which is bearing the brunt of the AIDS epidemic, the Federation aims to expand treatment and intensify its campaign against discrimination of victims.
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An aerial view of the flooded area of Barador on the outskirts of Trinidad, Beni, some 400 km (248 miles) northeast of La Paz, February 26, 2007. The most devastating floods to hit Bolivia in 25 years have killed at least 35 people, destroyed thousands of homes, and mangled crops and roads throughout much of the South American nation. Most of the sparsely populated Beni province, which is roughly the size of the United Kingdom, is under water.