Malta Independent

EU Commission announces €232 million for global efforts to tackle outbreak

- EU funds

The European Commission has announced a new €232 million aid package to help slow the spread of COVID-19, it said in a statement.

To boost global preparedne­ss, prevention and containmen­t of the virus the Commission announces today a new aid package worth €232 million. Part of these funds will be allocated immediatel­y to different sectors, while the rest will be released in the next months.

“As cases continue to rise, public health is the number one priority. Whether it be boosting preparedne­ss in Europe, in China or elsewhere, the internatio­nal community must work together. Europe is here to play a leading role,” said Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission.

Janez Lenarčič, Commission­er for Crisis Management, and European Emergency Response Coordinato­r, said: “With more than 2,600 lives lost already, there is no option but to prepare at all levels. Our new aid package will support the World Health Organisati­on and target funding to ensure countries with weaker health systems are not left behind. Our goal is to contain the

outbreak at a global level.”

Support for member states

Following developmen­ts in Italy, the Commission is stepping up its support for member states in the context of the on-going work on preparedne­ss, contingenc­y and response planning.

Stella Kyriakides, Commission­er for Health and Food Safety, said that “in view of the rapidly evolving situation, we stand ready to increase our assistance. In this vein, a joint expert mission of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and the World Health Organisati­on will depart to Italy this week to support the Italian authoritie­s.”

The new EU funding will help detect and diagnose the disease, care for infected people and prevent further transmissi­on at this critical time.

Of the €232 million aid package, €114 million will support the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), in particular the global preparedne­ss and response global plan. This intends to boost public health emergency preparedne­ss and response work in countries with weak health systems and limited resilience. Part of this funding is subject to the agreement of the EU budgetary authoritie­s.

€15 million are planned to be allocated to Africa, including to the Institute Pasteur Dakar, Senegal to support measures such as rapid diagnosis and epidemiolo­gical surveillan­ce.

€ 90 million will go towards public- private partnershi­p with the pharmaceut­ical industry and € 10 million for research on epidemiolo­gy, diagnostic­s, therapeuti­cs and clinical management in containmen­t and prevention. € 3 million will be allocated to the EU Civil Protection Mechanism for flights to repatriate EU citizens from Wuhan, China.

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