"Transnational corporations producing and aggressively marketing alcohol rely on the harmful use of alcohol for their sales and profits"
By Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent
LONDON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - International health campaigners and alcohol concern groups called on a major global HIV and malaria fund on Thursday to end immediately a partnership it had signed with the Dutch brewer Heineken.
In an open letter to the director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
"Transnational corporations producing and aggressively marketing alcohol rely on the harmful use of alcohol for their sales and profits," the letter said.
It accused companies such as Heineken of undermining and subverting evidence-based alcohol policy implementation "at the same time as they expand distribution networks and marketing to grow their market in
The open letter, a copy of which was sent to Reuters, was addressed to the Global Fund's incoming executive director Peter Sands, its board chair Aida Kurtovic, as well as its interim executive director.
It was signed by Katie Dain of the NCD Alliance, which groups 2,000 health
The Global Fund, a grouping of governments, civil society and the private sector which invests some $4 billion a year into programmes to fight infectious diseases, announced a new partnership with Heineken last week which it said would "further advance a common goal" of fighting disease epidemics in Africa.
Under the deal Heineken - the world's second-largest brewer - would lend expertise in logistics and communications to help the Global Fund reach specific demographic groups most at risk of HIV, tuberculosis
Seth Faison, a spokesman for the Global Fund, said the letter had been received and noted.
"We ... appreciate the points it makes about the role of alcohol in public health and development," he said in an emailed reply to Reuters. "We take these concerns seriously."
He added, however, that the risks and benefits of the Heineken partnership had been thoroughly reviewed by Global Fund senior managers in mid-2017 before the deal was approved.
He said Heineken's supply chain experts would work with Global Fund planners to better deliver medicines and health supplies to people who need them.
It said the Global Fund would enable both
The health campaigners said, however, that they were deeply concerned about the partnership's implications for health.
"We therefore respectfully request that you end the partnership with Heineken and that you take our concerns into consideration when ... exploring future partnerships," they wrote.
(Additional reporting by Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels. Editing by William Maclean)
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