Skip to content
July 18, 2026
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Political Economist

Political Economist

A liberal News reporting Politics, Sports, Business, Commentaries

  • Home
  • National News
    • Metro News
      • metro
    • Society
    • Crime and Justice
  • Special Reports
    • Investigation
    • Features
    • Interviews
  • Opinion
    • Commentaries
    • Perspectives
  • Press Releases
  • International News
  • Business & Economy
  • Politics
Watch Online
  • Home
  • International News
  • Poor nations try to bridge AIDS funding gap but prevention efforts dwindle – UN
  • International News

Poor nations try to bridge AIDS funding gap but prevention efforts dwindle – UN

Admin July 10, 2025
HIV

HIV/AIDS logo

July 10, 2025

Some poorer nations hit by cuts in HIV/AIDS funding from rich donors have boosted their own spending in response, but not enough to make up for huge staff losses and drops in preventative drug use, UNAIDS said on Thursday.

In its annual report for 2025, launched in South Africa, the agency also reiterated that if the Trump administration’s cuts to the U.S. HIV programme remain permanent, there could be 6 million extra infections and 4 million more deaths by 2029.

Inside Gaza City’s Al-Helou hospital, the neonatal unit faces a crippling shortage of equipment and fuel.

Trump’s sudden slashing of finance for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) threw the global response to HIV/AIDS into disarray.

Although many countries still have enough life-saving antiretroviral drugs, clinics aimed at vulnerable groups such as gay men, sex workers and teenage girls have shut due to a lack of paid staff, and prevention programmes have all but petered out.

“Prevention was hit harder than treatment. Key populations were the worst affected … they depended on tailored services by community leaders, and those were the first to go,” UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima told Reuters in an interview in Johannesburg.

Byanyima said that even before the Trump cuts, donors were scaling back development assistance, notably European countries.

“They’ve told us that it has to do with defense spending,” she said, adding that figures showed “global health (spending) peaked and then it also started declining with the Ukraine war.”

Meanwhile, UNAIDS itself is reducing staff numbers to 294, from 661 previously, a spokesperson told Reuters by email.

The UNAIDS report said 25 out of 60 low and middle-income countries had boosted HIV spending in their domestic budgets between them by about 8%.

“This is promising, but not sufficient to replace the scale of international funding in countries that are heavily reliant,” it said.

By the end of 2024, infections had been brought down by 40% and AIDS-related deaths by more than half from 2010 levels, the report said, but there were still 1.3 million new infections in that year alone.

REUTERS

  • Facebook
  • Share on X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email
  • Copy Link
Tags: donald Trump PEPFAR UNAIDS Winnie Byanyima

Post navigation

Previous Nigeria secures $747-million Deutsche Bank-led syndicated loan for coastal highway
Next NDDC @ 25: Asaba monarch, Gov. Aiyedatiwa, stakeholders hail commission for renewed Niger Delta transformation, by Jerome-Mario Utomi

Related Stories

Oil rises on renewed US-Iran hostilities and threat of Red Sea closure crude oil
  • International News

Oil rises on renewed US-Iran hostilities and threat of Red Sea closure

July 17, 2026
50 migrants feared lost in Mediterranean, 10 survive after boat capsizes, security sources say Migrants
  • International News

50 migrants feared lost in Mediterranean, 10 survive after boat capsizes, security sources say

July 14, 2026
Oil jumps 4% as new military strikes threaten Hormuz shipments crude oil
  • Business & Economy
  • International News

Oil jumps 4% as new military strikes threaten Hormuz shipments

July 13, 2026
logo

Political Economist is a liberal news magazine with global affiliations.

At Political Economist, we promote free enterprise and act as a catalyst for the growth of knowledge economy. We are proudly pan-Nigeria yet richly spiced with African and global news. We offer a fair and balanced news reportage presented by our team of well-heeled professional journalists. <

About us

  • 5 Olutosin Ajayi Street, By CPM Church, Ajao Estate, Lagos State, Nigeria
  • +234 805 680 1124
  • info@politicaleconomistng.com

Follow

Subscribe to notifications

You may have missed

Oborevwori unveils digital advertising platform to boost Delta revenue
  • Business & Economy

Oborevwori unveils digital advertising platform to boost Delta revenue

July 18, 2026
Court sentences two to death for rape, murder of 17-yr-old Pastor jailed for rape
  • Crime and Justice

Court sentences two to death for rape, murder of 17-yr-old

July 18, 2026
Teacher flogs 12-year-old student to death, police launch manhunt Police
  • Crime and Justice

Teacher flogs 12-year-old student to death, police launch manhunt

July 18, 2026
₦941.9m IPPIS payroll scam: Court orders final forfeiture of money recovered by ICPC from 909 accounts in 14 banks
  • Crime and Justice

₦941.9m IPPIS payroll scam: Court orders final forfeiture of money recovered by ICPC from 909 accounts in 14 banks

July 18, 2026
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Copyright © All rights reserved. | DarkNews by AF themes.