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Bono launches campaign to fight AIDS in Africa

Raising money by selling everything from red cell phones to T-shirts

WINFREY BONO
Irish rocker Bono, frontman for U2, waves to the crowd as he arrives at a store on Chicago's "Magnificent Mile" on Oct. 12, 2006. Bono and talk show host Oprah Winfrey, left, went on a shopping spree to promote Bono's new RED line of clothing, accessories and gadgets that will raise money to fight AIDS in Africa.
M. Spencer Green / AP
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updated 5:49 p.m. ET Oct. 13, 2006

LOS ANGELES - Irish rock star Bono on Friday launched the U.S. version of his “Red” campaign that turns shopping into a funding stream to fight AIDS in Africa.

The program — the brainchild of the U2 singer and Bobby Shriver, nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy — encourages shoppers to buy Red-branded goods, while manufacturers pledge to channel a portion of the profits to AIDS programs financed by the U.N.-backed Global Fund.

The campaign has already raised about $10 million in Britain since its launch there earlier this year.

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“The idea is simple, the products are sexy and people live instead of die,” Bono said in a statement. “When you buy a Red product, the company gives money to buy pills that will keep someone in Africa alive.”

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Gap is offering T-shirts and jeans, Motorola a red cell phone, Converse a series of limited edition shoes, Apple a red iPod nano and Giorgio Armani a collection of clothes and accessories — all of which will carry the Red trademark and channel up to 50 percent of profits to the program.

Bono was promoting the campaign on Oprah Winfrey’s influential TV show on Friday after a shopping trip to participating Red stores in Chicago on Thursday.

The U.S. launch was also marked with full-page advertisements in major newspapers and celebrity support from Winfrey, singers Kanye West and Mary J. Blige, actors Don Cheadle and Penelope Cruz and model Christy Turlington.

Bono and fellow Irish rock star Bob Geldof have used their fame to raise money for Africa through international concerts and campaigns to press leaders of rich nations to do more to eradicate poverty.

The Red campaign works alongside the ONE Campaign to Make Poverty History — a longer-term project launched in 2005 by Bono and 11 U.S. aid and nonprofit groups — that has more than 2 million members.

The Global Fund was established in 2002 to channel government and private-sector funding into the fight against AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis — the big killer diseases of the developing world — with a focus on Africa.

“We want to change history by writing its future,” said Shriver, a Santa Monica, California, city councilman. “People buy things every day. But now when they buy Red, they will look good and do good — and that’s good business.”

Copyright 2009 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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