Global Fund disease czar warns of limits to shifting foreign aid to private capital
OTTAWA — The head of the world’s major funding mechanism for tackling infectious diseases says the Carney government’s focus on leveraging private capital for aid will have only a limited impact on the world’s most vulnerable people.
Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, also says Canada is making a political choice not to eradicate tuberculosis in places like Nunavut.
Sands gave an exclusive interview Tuesday to The Canadian Press during a visit to Ottawa — his first since Prime Minister Mark Carney announced last fall that Canada would be pulling back funding for global health initiatives and would link aid dollars to economic spinoffs for Canadians.
Ottawa’s $2.7 billion cut to foreign aid over the next four years follows the near-collapse of USAID, the United States’ international development agency, and cuts from other countries which play key roles in international development.


