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United States pledges $2.7 bln for Kenya HIV battle

NAIROBI, (Reuters) – The United States committed $2.7  billion yesterday to help fight HIV infection in Kenya where  more than a million people are living with the disease.
The pledge is part of the largest U.S. foreign aid programme  devoted to a single disease — the President’s Emergency Plan  for AIDS Relief — and has been lauded as a bright spot of  former President George W. Bush’s tenure.

The money, which is to be dispersed over the next five  years, represents a 112 percent increase in funding for the  programme in Kenya, east Africa’s largest economy. It is seen by  the United States as an enhancement of a successful programme.

“Kenya is now the biggest recipient of this programme in the  world, more than South Africa,” U.S. Ambassador Michael  Ranneberger told reporters in Nairobi.
He said the agreement with Nairobi meant the government was  expected to increase direct budget support for the fight against  HIV/AIDS by a minimum of 10 percent annually.

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