British Prime Minister David Cameron told the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation, a donors conference in London, that the new funding arrangement would help 'vaccinate more than 80 million children against diseases such as pneumonia and diarrhoea.'
The conference, being attended by world leaders, charities, private companies and philanthropists, including Microsoft chief Bill Gates, is discussing how to generate the funds to ensure children receive protection against potentially fatal diseases.
"In addition to our existing support for GAVI, we will provide 814 million pounds of new funding up to 2015," Cameron said.
"This will help vaccinate over 80 million children and save 1.4 million lives."
"That is one child vaccinated every two seconds for five years. It is one child's life saved every two minutes. That is what the money that the British taxpayer is putting in will give", he said.
The conference will be told that the lives of millions of youngsters are at stake because of a funding crisis in attempts to keep them free from disease.
Cameron and Bill Gates, one of the world's most successful business chiefs and philanthropists, are urging the world to support the case.
Gates told the conference that his Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation was pledging an additional $1 billion (616 million pounds) over the next five years to help the vaccination campaign.
The money adds to a pledge made by Australia's Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd yesterday who said his country would donate $210 million to GAVI over three years until 2013.
More international donors, including the US, France, Germany, Japan and others, are expected to add their pledges later on Monday in an effort to stump up an extra $3.7 billion needed by GAVI to fund its programmes through to 2015.
Cameron acknowledged that the increased cash for vaccinations -- part of the UK's goal of devoting 0.7 per cent of national income to aid by 2013 --
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