Zürcher Nachrichten - US funding cuts could reverse decades of gains in AIDS fight: UN

EUR -
AED 4.335233
AFN 73.187973
ALL 96.432225
AMD 445.980272
ANG 2.1127
AOA 1082.479348
ARS 1649.09082
AUD 1.669257
AWG 2.127773
AZN 2.008026
BAM 1.957469
BBD 2.385634
BDT 144.743418
BGN 1.944974
BHD 0.445099
BIF 3510.793535
BMD 1.180457
BND 1.497177
BOB 8.184979
BRL 6.183111
BSD 1.18451
BTN 107.348532
BWP 15.601303
BYN 3.384186
BYR 23136.948094
BZD 2.382231
CAD 1.614257
CDF 2685.538884
CHF 0.911844
CLF 0.025758
CLP 1017.058079
CNY 8.155181
CNH 8.142311
COP 4344.339751
CRC 570.786691
CUC 1.180457
CUP 31.282098
CVE 110.359099
CZK 24.234832
DJF 210.929853
DKK 7.471287
DOP 72.872136
DZD 153.39439
EGP 55.894369
ERN 17.706848
ETB 182.048527
FJD 2.594466
FKP 0.872099
GBP 0.873532
GEL 3.151692
GGP 0.872099
GHS 13.035115
GIP 0.872099
GMD 87.353847
GNF 10396.865056
GTQ 9.084746
GYD 247.8113
HKD 9.225162
HNL 31.328713
HRK 7.536503
HTG 155.262387
HUF 378.495087
IDR 19946.174079
ILS 3.702998
IMP 0.872099
INR 107.481155
IQD 1551.723102
IRR 49726.731741
ISK 144.900739
JEP 0.872099
JMD 184.437263
JOD 0.836959
JPY 182.781301
KES 152.278831
KGS 103.231
KHR 4758.057035
KMF 492.250525
KPW 1062.407391
KRW 1707.246713
KWD 0.362023
KYD 0.987042
KZT 579.263919
LAK 25378.639509
LBP 106069.541916
LKR 366.382402
LRD 219.717346
LSL 18.953961
LTL 3.485582
LVL 0.714047
LYD 7.478377
MAD 10.822428
MDL 20.201225
MGA 5153.394125
MKD 61.658661
MMK 2478.486267
MNT 4214.626635
MOP 9.536632
MRU 47.190238
MUR 54.619829
MVR 18.184989
MWK 2053.85125
MXN 20.348821
MYR 4.614996
MZN 75.434367
NAD 18.953961
NGN 1586.817091
NIO 43.587165
NOK 11.223875
NPR 171.757452
NZD 1.972537
OMR 0.453869
PAB 1.18451
PEN 3.961778
PGK 5.162402
PHP 68.469427
PKR 331.060084
PLN 4.217441
PYG 7741.601002
QAR 4.306672
RON 5.095318
RSD 117.447168
RUB 90.215243
RWF 1729.875006
SAR 4.427625
SBD 9.496988
SCR 16.179597
SDG 710.045085
SEK 10.643351
SGD 1.495143
SHP 0.885648
SLE 28.923581
SLL 24753.582553
SOS 675.776212
SRD 44.504343
STD 24433.066951
STN 24.520908
SVC 10.363837
SYP 13055.347464
SZL 18.962168
THB 36.756472
TJS 11.169624
TMT 4.131598
TND 3.420717
TOP 2.842256
TRY 51.668606
TTD 8.025843
TWD 37.238088
TZS 3046.643845
UAH 51.300142
UGX 4192.574867
USD 1.180457
UYU 46.019239
UZS 14377.259003
VES 467.309677
VND 30656.456225
VUV 139.934553
WST 3.188684
XAF 656.51679
XAG 0.014917
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.190243
XCG 2.13472
XDR 0.816496
XOF 656.51679
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.450418
ZAR 18.992041
ZMK 10625.52979
ZMW 22.155892
ZWL 380.106523
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.93

    +0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.81

    +0.38%

  • BCC

    -0.4700

    85.6

    -0.55%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    61.18

    +0.51%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    25.71

    -0.31%

  • RIO

    2.0500

    98.93

    +2.07%

  • NGG

    -1.6100

    90.81

    -1.77%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.87

    -0.07%

  • BP

    0.9700

    38.53

    +2.52%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    18.1

    +3.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.18

    -0.3%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    15.66

    0%

  • AZN

    -0.8100

    208.67

    -0.39%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    30.55

    +0.33%

US funding cuts could reverse decades of gains in AIDS fight: UN
US funding cuts could reverse decades of gains in AIDS fight: UN / Photo: Phill Magakoe - AFP/File

US funding cuts could reverse decades of gains in AIDS fight: UN

The halt to US foreign aid is a "ticking time bomb" that could reverse decades of hard-fought gains in the fight against AIDS, the United Nations warned Thursday.

Text size:

Around 31.6 million people were on antiretroviral drugs in 2024 and deaths from AIDS-related illnesses had more than halved since 2010 to 630,000 that year, the UNAIDS agency said in a new report.

But now infections were likely to shoot up as funding cuts have shuttered prevention and treatment programmes, it said.

The United States has been the world's biggest donor of humanitarian assistance but President Donald Trump's abrupt slashing of international aid in February sent the global humanitarian community scrambling to keep life-saving operations afloat.

"We are proud of the achievements, but worried about this sudden disruption reversing the gains we have made," UNAIDS executive director Winnie Byanyima told AFP ahead of the report's launch in Johannesburg.

The agency in April warned that a permanent discontinuation of PEPFAR, the massive US effort to fight HIV/AIDS, would lead to more than six million new infections and an additional 4.2 million AIDS-related deaths in the next four years.

This would bring the pandemic back to levels not seen since the early 2000s.

"This is not just a funding gap – it's a ticking time bomb" whose effects are already felt worldwide, Byanyima said in a press release.

Over 60 percent of all women-led HIV organisations surveyed by UNAIDS had lost funding or had to suspend services, the report said.

In a striking example, the number of people receiving pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) drugs to prevent transmission in Nigeria fell by over 85 percent in the first few months of 2025.

The "story of how the world has come together" to fight HIV/AIDS is "one of the most important stories of progress in global health," Byanyima told AFP.

"But that great story has been disrupted massively" by Trump's "unprecedented" and "cruel" move, she said.

"Priorities can shift, but you do not take away life-saving support from people just like that," she said.

- Key medical research affected -

Crucial medical research on prevention and treatment have also shut down, including many in South Africa which has one of the highest HIV rates in the world and has become a leader in global research.

"Developing countries themselves contribute very much towards the research on HIV and AIDS, and that research serves the whole world," Byaniyma said.

In 25 out of 60 low- and middle-income countries surveyed by UNAIDS, governments had found ways to compensate part of the funding shortfall with domestic resources.

"We have to move towards nationally-owned and financed responses," Byaniyma said, calling for debt relief and the reform of international financial institutions to "free up the fiscal space for developing countries to pay for their own response".

Still, the global HIV response built from grassroots activism was "resilient by its very nature", she told AFP.

"We moved from people dying every single day to now a point where it is really like a chronic illness," she said.

"There is no question that the investment has been worth it, and continues to be worth it. It saves lives."

O.Meier--NZN