The Government is to contribute €110 million over three years to new international initiatives aimed at tackling disease and combat child hunger, Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney has announced.
Speaking at the United Nations in New York on Wednesday, Mr Coveney said Ireland would give €65 million to the new global fund to tackle Aids, malaria and TB around the world.
He said €50 million over three years would be provided to an initiative to combat childhood malnutrition around the world caused by conflict, drought and climate change.
The Minister said that the US government had sought the international community to contribute €250 million towards this project – of which Ireland was allocating €50 million to feeding children “who otherwise may starve”.
Opinion: As Pope Francis’s book Hope shows, defining what is autobiography isn’t always easy
Jack Horgan-Jones: Can Jim O’Callaghan live up to his brand as the law and order politician?
The New Nuclear Age by Ankit Panda: Could ‘growing loose talk’ lead to the ultimate disaster?
Pamela Anderson: ‘I felt like life was really like death for me’
Mr Coveney also said there would be another big increase in spending on overseas development aid in the budget next week.
He said despite all the crises over recent years Ireland had increased overseas aid by hundreds of millions of euro.