Anonymous ID: 09e4f7 April 4, 2020, 8:58 p.m. No.8690605   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0642 >>0649 >>0857

>https://admintoadmin.com/lauren-jiloty/

>>8688807 (pb)

>https://wikileaks.org/clinton-emails/emailid/15068

 

Bill Gates' secretary

something 'Madam Secretary Alice'

 

After Senator Graham’s retirement in 2004, she was hired as Executive Assistant to New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton. After five years in the Senate, Jiloty was invited to follow Senator Clinton to the U.S. State Department where she served as Special Assistant to the Secretary. During her tenure at the State Department, she worked on special projects and helped support official diplomatic visits to more than 20 countries.

 

In 2011, Jiloty was recruited to join the private sector and become Senior Executive Assistant to Bill Gates. The move took her from Washington D.C. to Seattle, Washington, where she resides with her husband, Steve, and dog, Lucy. They enjoy cooking and traveling, and Lauren has special interests in literature, animal rescue, design, fashion, and the arts.

Anonymous ID: 09e4f7 April 4, 2020, 9:02 p.m. No.8690633   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0642 >>0687 >>0768 >>0821

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-pandemic-insurance-idUSKBN19J2JJ

 

World Bank launches 'pandemic bond' to tackle major outbreaks

2017

 

The World Bank has launched a “pandemic bond” to support an emergency financing facility intended to release money quickly to fight a major health crisis like the 2014 Ebola outbreak.

 

The catastrophe bond, which will pay out depending on the size of the outbreak, its growth rate and the number of countries affected, is the first of its kind for epidemics. It should mean money is disbursed much faster than during West Africa’s Ebola crisis.

 

Ebola spread across the region in the early months of 2014. Michael Bennett, head of derivatives and structured finance at the World Bank’s capital markets department, said that if the pandemic emergency financing facility (PEF) had existed in 2014, some $100 million could have been mobilised as early as July.

 

In reality, money did not begin to flow on this scale until three months later, by which time the number of deaths from Ebola had increased tenfold.

 

“In the end about 11,000 people died in that pandemic and it’s estimated that the cost to the countries most affected – Guinea, Liberia and Sierre Leone - was about $2.8 billion,” Bennett said.

 

The PEF will offer coverage to all countries eligible for financing from the International Development Agency (IDA), the arm of the World Bank dedicated to the world’s poorest countries.

 

It covers outbreaks of infectious diseases most likely to cause major epidemics, including pandemic influenza strains; coronaviruses, including SARS; filoviruses, which include Ebola and Marburg; plus others such as Crimean Congo fever, Rift Valley fever and Lassa fever.