GMA Logo Rihanna donates for COVID19 response
What's Hot

Rihanna donates $5 million to fight COVID-19

By Marah Ruiz
Published March 24, 2020 12:35 PM PHT

Around GMA

Around GMA

NBA: Kevin Durant 8th to 31,000 points as Rockets sink Suns
#WilmaPH spotted over coastal waters of Sulat, Eastern Samar
This family weekend workshop features experts to elevate Filipinos' kitchen and dining holiday traditions

Article Inside Page


Showbiz News

Rihanna donates for COVID19 response


Singer Rihanna has donated $5 million to COVID-19 efforts across the world.

International singer and entrepreneur Rihanna donated $5 million to COVID-19 efforts across the globe through the Clara Lionel Foundation (CLF).

In a release posted on their website, the foundation says that it has provided funding for organizations like Direct Relief, Feeding America, Partners in Health, The World Health Organization's COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, the International Rescue Committee, and a few others.

The funds will go to local food banks serving at-risk communities and the elderly in the United States, testing and care in countries like Haiti and Malawi, protective equipment for frontline health workers and diagnostic labs, establishment and maintenance of intensive care units, and distribution of critical respiratory supplies.

It will also provide funding for the development of vaccines and other therapies across the globe, healthcare worker training, and virus prevention and containment in countries that will be on the frontlines of the COVID-19 response.

Rihanna founded the Clara Lionel Foundation (CLF), named after her grandparents, back in 2012. It funds programs related to education and emergency preparedness all over the world.

A post shared by badgalriri (@badgalriri) on

Meanwhile, the Philippines is under state of calamity while Luzon is under enhanced community quarantine to stop the spread of COVID-19.



NBA star Kyrie Irving donates $323K for COVID-19 relief

IN PHOTOS: South Korean stars who gave donations to combat the coronavirus disease