Aids victims need your cash now, Bono tells US
Campaigning rock star Bono has called on the United States to release billions of dollars to help combat the global Aids pandemic.
The lead singer with Irish band U2 told American politicians they should not spend âtwo months hanging around pulling Christmas crackersâ while thousands of people died from the disease.
He praised Congress which last week approved donating nearly âŹ2.3bn for the treatment of Aids.
The money is part of a five-year package of nearly âŹ14.3bn requested by President George Bush for the fight against the disease.
But the aid is part of a Congressional spending bill, which is not expected to be complete until January.
Bono said the cash was needed immediately and suggested the political process to approve aid was too slow.
âIn two months not to be melodramatic, but why not â 500,000 people will die,â Bono said.
âTwo months hanging around pulling Christmas crackers â this is not the year to do it.
âThis is not an issue to play politics with. Donât play politics, thereâs too many peopleâs lives at stake,â he said.
Bono called suggestions that African states would waste aid money âpreposterousâ.
And he added: âNext year, thereâs going to have to be more money. Itâs a lot more expensive the longer you leave it.â
Bono was speaking to CNN after it emerged he would be recognised for his humanitarian work at an awards dinner hosted by the family of civil rights leader the Rev Martin Luther King.
He will be honoured at the 2004 King Centre Salute to Greatness awards dinner on January 17 in Atlanta.
âWe are fortunate this year to honour Bono for exemplifying many of the qualities that my husband, Martin, indicated were imperative to moving our society into the beloved community of which he so often spoke,â said Coretta Scott King, Kingâs widow and the founder of the King Centre.
Mrs King highlighted Bonoâs work on behalf of Third World debt relief and on focusing attention on the Aids crisis in Africa.
âHe has focused mass public attention on the worldâs poorest continent and lobbied politicians around the globe to take action,â she said in a statement.
On Saturday, Bono took part in a World Aids Day concert hosted by Nelson Mandela in Cape Town, South Africa.

