Gates, wife and Bono named Time’s persons of the year

Time Magazine has named Microsoft Corp. Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates, his wife Melinda and musician Bono as its “Persons of the year” for their charitable work, it said over the weekend.

The three grace the cover of the Dec. 26 edition of Time Magazine, which goes on wide sale from Monday. They received the magazine’s annual honor “for being shrewd about doing good, for rewiring politics and re-engineering justice, for making mercy smarter and hope strategic and then daring the rest of us to follow,” it said.

The Gates’ charitable work is typically done through The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which was founded in 2000. It’s run by Bill Gates’ father, William H. Gates Sr., and Patty Stonesifer, and has an endowment of about $29 billion, according to the foundation’s Web site.

The Seattle-based foundation works both locally, supporting at-risk families in Washington and Oregon states, and globally, promoting equity in healthcare, education and public libraries.

Of the roughly $10 billion it has granted since inception about $5.8 billion has gone on global health initiatives such as battling AIDS or malaria and about $2.6 billion has gone to education-based initiatives. Spending on projects in the Pacific Northwest has totaled around $570 million.

Bill and Melinda Gates welcomed the award in a statement.

“We realize that we’ve been extremely fortunate in business, and we want to give back in ways that can do the most good for the most people. But we also believe that everyone has something to offer — time, money, or energy — that can help others,” they said in the statement.

“Together we’ve all made important progress, but there’s still a lot of work to do. Too many children in the developing world face lives without health, hope, or opportunity. Too many children in the United States are not getting an education that prepares them for success in life. Working together, we can solve these problems. These children are our children, and their futures depend on all of us,” the statement said.

Musician Bono, best known as the front-man of rock group U2, is well known for his charitable work and was lauded by Time Magazine as being the “rocker who has made debt reduction sexy.”

“There are a lot of people who could be here,” Bono said in a statement on his band’s Web site. “What’s really key is, all of us are in agreement that this can be a generation that can end extreme poverty. And by that we mean stupid, daft poverty where 3,000 kids are dying every day of a mosquito bite in Africa. Malaria. We can fix stuff like that.”

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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