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- | The **Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator** (ACT-Accelerator) is a multinational collaboration, | + | The **Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator** (ACT-Accelerator) is a multinational collaboration, |
===== Donors ===== | ===== Donors ===== | ||
- | ACT-Accelerator is funded by [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]], [[Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations]] (CEPI), [[Chan Zuckerberg Initiative]], [[Cisco]], [[COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund]], [[Diagnostics Consortium for COVID-19]], [[Fidelity]], [[Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics]], [[Gates Philanthropy Partners]], [[Gavi]], the [[Global Fund]], [[Goldman Sachs]], [[Google]], [[Mastercard]], [[Nestlé]], [[Procter & Gamble]], [[Reed Hastings]] (co-founder of [[Netflix]]), [[Rockefeller Foundation]], [[Shell]], [[Thistledown Foundation]], [[TikTok]], [[UNICEF]], [[Unitaid]], [[United Nations Development Programme]], [[Vaccine Forward Initiative]], [[Visa Foundation]], [[Wellcome Trust]], [[WHO Foundation]], | + | ACT-Accelerator is funded by:((//Access to COVID-19 tools funding commitment tracker.// (2022, April 1). World Health Organization. https:// |
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+ | <WRAP column col4> | ||
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+ | * [[Analog Devices Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[Asia Philanthropy Circle]] | ||
+ | * [[Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[BlackRock]] | ||
+ | * [[Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations]] (CEPI) | ||
+ | * [[Chan Zuckerberg Initiative]] | ||
+ | * [[Cisco]] | ||
+ | * [[COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund]] | ||
+ | * [[Diagnostics Consortium for COVID-19]] | ||
+ | * [[Fidelity]] | ||
+ | * [[Fifa Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics]] | ||
+ | * [[Gates Philanthropy Partners]] | ||
+ | * [[Gavi]] | ||
+ | * [[Global Fund]] | ||
+ | * [[Go Give One Campaign]] | ||
+ | * [[Goldman Sachs]] | ||
+ | * [[Google]] | ||
+ | * [[Mastercard]] | ||
+ | * [[Nestlé]] | ||
+ | * [[Procter & Gamble]] | ||
+ | * [[Reed Hastings]] (co-founder of [[Netflix]]) | ||
+ | * [[Rockefeller Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[Shell]] | ||
+ | * [[Thistledown Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[TikTok]] | ||
+ | * [[UBS]] | ||
+ | * [[UNICEF]] | ||
+ | * [[Unitaid]] | ||
+ | * [[United Nations Development Programme]] | ||
+ | * [[Vaccine Forward Initiative]] | ||
+ | * [[Visa Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[Vital Strategies]] | ||
+ | * [[Wellcome Trust]] | ||
+ | * [[WHO Foundation]] | ||
+ | * [[World Health Organization]] (WHO) | ||
+ | |||
+ | </ | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Pandemic Funding Scandal ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | POLITICO | ||
+ | |||
+ | Special Report - How Bill Gates and his partners took over the global Covid response | ||
+ | By Erin Banco, Ashleigh Furlong and Lennart Pfahler | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Four health organizations, | ||
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+ | |||
+ | While nations were still debating the seriousness of the pandemic, the groups identified potential vaccine makers and targeted investments in the development of tests, treatments and shots. And they used their clout with the [[:World Health Organization]] to help create an ambitious worldwide distribution plan for the dissemination of those Covid tools to needy nations, though it would ultimately fail to live up to its original promises. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The four organizations had worked together in the past, and three of them shared a common history. The largest and most powerful was the [[:Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation]], | ||
+ | |||
+ | POLITICO and WELT examined meeting minutes as well as thousands of pages of financial disclosures and tax documents, which revealed that** the groups have spent nearly $10 billion since 2020 — the same amount as the leading U.S. agency charged with fighting Covid abroad**. It is one of the first comprehensive accountings of expenditures by global health organizations on the global fight against the pandemic. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[:Jeremy Farrar]], the [[:Wellcome Trust]] director - - defended the [[: | ||
+ | |||
+ | “Before ACT-A was set up, there was no formal mechanism in place to coordinate and accelerate the development, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The POLITICO and WELT investigation found, however, that ACT-A’s structure diminished accountability. ACT-A representatives set funding priorities and campaigned for donations.** But the money — $23 billion in total — went directly to the entities involved** in the initiative, such as [[:Gavi]] and [[:CEPI]]. Although ACT-A’s website keeps track of how much money was raised, it is nearly impossible to tell exactly where all of it went. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Meanwhile, in the U.S., leaders of the organizations were also in contact with senior U.S. health officials. Emails obtained by Republicans on Capitol Hill illustrate the extent to which Farrar, the director of Wellcome, was in touch with officials in some of the highest levels of the U.S. government on a sensitive health and national security issue. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The emails,((https://web.archive.org/ | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== External links ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [[https:// |