FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, January 23, 2004
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Peace Corps
Contact: Press Office
Phone: 202.692.2230
Fax: 202.692.2201
Email: pressoffice@peacecorps.gov |
Peace Corps to Receive Record High Funding |
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The United States Senate passed the Omnibus Appropriations
Conference Report this week, which will provide the Peace Corps with $310
million in funding for Fiscal Year 2004 and $15 million for volunteer and agency
efforts to fight the AIDS epidemic around the world. Pending the President’s
signature, the total Peace Corps allocation of $325 million will be the largest
appropriation in the history of the agency.
In conjunction with the President’s Global AIDS Initiative, the Peace Corps
continues to increase its commitment to fight the growth of the pandemic, and
the $15 million will help to make this possible. In May 2003, the Peace Corps
committed 1,000 new volunteers to work on HIV/AIDS related activities. The Peace
Corps is also training all volunteers who serve in Africa, the Caribbean,
Eastern Europe, and Central Asia as advocates and educators on HIV/AIDS
prevention and care. In fact, the Peace Corps programs in Swaziland and Botswana
are entirely focused on HIV/AIDS education and awareness programs.
“Last year, Peace Corps volunteers touched the lives of nearly 400,000
individuals, including approximately 30,000 orphans and vulnerable children,”
Director Gaddi H. Vasquez stated. “We are fully committed to the Global AIDS
Initiative and this additional $15 million will help us reach even more people
in Africa and the Caribbean.”
The Peace Corps serves in 10 countries included in the Global AIDS
Initiative—Botswana, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda,
Zambia, Haiti, and Guyana.
Today, more than 2,300 Peace Corps volunteers are working in more than 55 posts
around the world on HIV/AIDS projects and programs. Over the last year,
volunteers have collaborated with more than 1,100 organizations worldwide, such
as NGOs, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and other
groups.
Volunteers employ a variety of activities in their education and awareness
projects, such as training youth as peer educators, working with faith-based
organizations on prevention messages, coordinating with boys and girls camps,
organizing awareness raising events, teaching behavior change communication, and
training youth leaders. In addition, volunteers provide support to children
orphaned by HIV/AIDS and work to develop programs that provide support to
communities affected by the disease.
The Peace Corps provides practical assistance to developing countries by sharing
America’s most precious resource, its people. Through the work and contributions
of its volunteers over the past 42 years, the Peace Corps has emerged as a model
of success for encouraging sustainable development at the grass-roots level. The
Peace Corps’ larger purpose is to empower people in developing countries to take
charge of their own future and strengthen the bonds of friendship and
understanding between Americans and the people of other cultures.
Since 1961, more than 170,000 volunteers have served in the Peace Corps, working
in such diverse fields as education, health, HIV/AIDS education and awareness,
information technology, business development, the environment, and agriculture.
Peace Corps volunteers must be U.S. citizens and at least 18 years of age. Peace
Corps service is a two-year commitment.
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