Sverige sender 235 millioner kroner til Gaza

Den svenske regering har besluttet at sende yderligere 235 millioner kroner i humanitær hjælp til Gaza. Midlerne skal støtte sundhed, sanitet, rent vand og hygiejneartikler.

Regeringen annoncerede beslutningen mandag. Minister for bistand og udenrigshandel Benjamin Dousa (M) beskrev situationen som meget akut.

Regeringen har afsat i alt 800 millioner kroner til humanitær hjælp til Gaza. Af dette beløb blev 555 millioner sendt i marts, og yderligere 235 millioner bliver nu stillet til rådighed.

Dousa bemærkede, at antallet af rapporterede sygdomme forbundet med utilstrækkelige levevilkår er steget i løbet af foråret. Der resterer ti millioner kroner af de afsatte midler, og regeringen udelukker ikke yderligere støtte.

Den samlede svenske bistand til Gaza siden oktober 2023 beløber sig nu til 2,4 milliarder kroner.

Relaterede artikler

A photorealistic illustration of Swedish government officials announcing an energy crisis package in parliament.
Billede genereret af AI

Government presents 17.5 billion kronor crisis package

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The Swedish government presented a 17.5 billion kronor crisis package on Wednesday to tackle the global energy crisis. Backed by the Sweden Democrats, the measures are set to be approved by parliament before the summer recess.

Sweden is contributing 120 million kronor through Sida to the WHO to combat the Ebola outbreak in Congo-Kinshasa and neighboring countries.

Rapporteret af AI

The Canadian government announced on Friday 5.5 million Canadian dollars, equivalent to 4 million US dollars, in aid to address urgent food and medicine needs in Cuba. The funds will go to the Pan American Health Organization and the World Food Programme. This assistance adds to a February donation.

Region Dalarna has decided to increase support for the culture bus by one million kronor in the 2027 budget. The initiative gives more school classes in the county the chance to visit theaters and museums.

Rapporteret af AI

Sweden's foreign minister Maria Malmer Stenergard voiced concern that other countries may scale back bilateral aid to Ukraine now that the EU's 90 billion euro loan is finalized.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis