WHO recommends lifting COVID-19 travel restrictions

WHO Worker To Fundraise $1bn To Cover US Pullout

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When the World Health Organisation’s top donor the United States announced its withdrawal, one employee launched an online fundraiser to plug the gap — and her efforts have already raised more than $100,000.

Tania Cernuschi, 46, told AFP she had the brainwave just after US President Donald Trump signed an executive order announcing Washington would leave the WHO, one of his first actions on returning to office on January 20.

The WHO’s financial shortfall is set to grow further after Argentina announced Wednesday it was also quitting the UN health agency.

Cernuschi is aiming to raise $1 billion to make up for US contributions, which amounted to $1.3 billion — or 16 percent of the WHO’s budget — for the years 2022-2023.

“I was disturbed by the news,” said Cernuschi, an Italian development economist who has been at the WHO for 10 years.

“I woke up in the morning and thought of the campaign, and asked whether I could go ahead. And nobody stopped me.”

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A health worker prepares a dose of Chinese-made Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine in Belgrade Fair turned into a vaccination centre, on February 4, 2021. Inside the dome of Belgrade's fairgrounds, dozens of nurses in protective suits inject Covid-19 jabs into young and old alike, working with an efficiency that has turned Serbia into continental Europe's fastest vaccinator. The small Balkan country has inoculated more than 450,000 of its seven million population in almost two weeks, a rate that exceeds all countries in Europe outside the United Kingdom, according to the scientific publication Our World in Data. Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP
A file photo used to illustrate the story.

She launched her “One Dollar, One World” fundraising page on the website of the WHO Foundation — the arm of the UN agency that matches private finance with high-impact health projects.

“I’m asking for one dollar from a billion people, for $1 billion in total. But people can give more,” she said, adding that all funds go directly to the foundation.

More than 3,000 donors from countries across the world have chipped in, she said, raising some $104,000 as of Wednesday afternoon.

“We have about 20 who have given more than $500 and we’re expecting a big donation in the coming days of $20,000 which would be great,” she said.

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