Saturday, March 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada announces $1B for Global Fund to fight infectious diseases

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Nov, 2025 09:49 AM
  • Canada announces $1B for Global Fund to fight infectious diseases

Canada will contribute just over $1 billion over three years to the Global Fund to fight infectious diseases in the world's poorest countries.

Cindy Termorshuizen, Prime Minister Mark Carney's personal representative at the G20 summit in South Africa, made the announcement Friday in Johannesburg ahead of Carney's arrival at the summit.

The Global Fund helps fight diseases such as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. Canada has supported the fund since its inception in 2002.

Its programs distribute mosquito nets to protect populations from malaria and provide medication and treatments to people living with HIV and tuberculosis.

The new contribution is $190 million lower than Canada's last contribution to the Global Fund, announced in 2022. That $1.21 billion contribution over three years represented a 30 per cent increase in Canada's contribution at the time.

A media statement from The ONE Campaign, an organization that advocates for global investment in programs to support Africa, described the announcement as "a sharp break" from past increases in Canadian support for the Global Fund.

“This cut signals a retreat just as the path to an AIDS-free generation is in sight. It is the wrong move at the wrong time,” Justin McAuley, communications director at The ONE Campaign, said in a media statement.

The fund's eighth replenishment summit is being held in tandem with the annual G20 summit in Johannesburg.

Carney is on his way to South Africa for the G20 after meetings with leaders in the United Arab Emirates, which concluded with a promise of $70 billion in investments in Canadian businesses.

Canada's latest pledge to support the Global Fund is scheduled to run from 2027 until 2029.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Themba Hadebe

MORE National ARTICLES

Rescue crews, aerial searchers on the lookout for missing skier at B.C. resort

Rescue crews, aerial searchers on the lookout for missing skier at B.C. resort
A skier has gone missing at a resort in the British Columbia Interior, and ground- and air-based search crews are canvassing the area for any sign of him. Sun Peaks Resort says in a statement that 68-year-old Tomasz Jaholkowski was last seen on Tuesday at its West Bowl chairlift on Tod Mountain, northeast of Kamloops. 

Rescue crews, aerial searchers on the lookout for missing skier at B.C. resort

B.C. aims to hang onto 'Hollywood north' title by boosting film and TV tax incentives

B.C. aims to hang onto 'Hollywood north' title by boosting film and TV tax incentives
Premier David Eby said the tax credit for international projects made in B.C. will jump from 28 to 36 per cent, and an incentive for Canadian-content productions will increase from 35 to 36 per cent. There's also a special bonus to attract blockbuster productions with budgets of $200 million.

B.C. aims to hang onto 'Hollywood north' title by boosting film and TV tax incentives

Trump brushes off Ford's threat to cut Ontario's electricity exports to U.S. states

Trump brushes off Ford's threat to cut Ontario's electricity exports to U.S. states
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is brushing off threats from Ontario to restrict electricity exports. On Wednesday, Ford said Ontario is contemplating restricting electricity exports to Michigan, New York state and Minnesota if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs on all Canadian products.

Trump brushes off Ford's threat to cut Ontario's electricity exports to U.S. states

Canada can't say when it will clear 140,000 backlogged cases for First Nations kids

Canada can't say when it will clear 140,000 backlogged cases for First Nations kids
Canada told the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal it can't say when it will work through 140,000 backlogged requests for Jordan's Principle to be applied. The principle is a legal rule that stipulates that when a First Nations child needs health, social or educational services they are to receive them from the government first approached, with questions about final jurisdiction worked out afterward.

Canada can't say when it will clear 140,000 backlogged cases for First Nations kids

Man found guilty of second degree murder

Man found guilty of second degree murder
They say that Mounties in Richmond responded to a report of a body found on March 2, 2017, and I-HIT took over the file after they determined Allen William Skedden's death was suspicious. Police say the B-C Prosecution Service charged Adrianus Rosbergen in February 2022.

Man found guilty of second degree murder

Man who set fires at Calgary city hall lost testicle during police standoff: watchdog

Man who set fires at Calgary city hall lost testicle during police standoff: watchdog
The Alberta Serious Incident Response Team, or ASIRT, says officers responded to calls about an unknown man who broke into the building armed with a machete and set a number of fires.

Man who set fires at Calgary city hall lost testicle during police standoff: watchdog