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Protest At Abuja HIV Conference As US Revealed Aid Package To Fight HIV/AIDS

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Protest At Abuja HIV Conference As US Revealed Disbursement Of $3.4 Billion To Fight HIV/Aids In Nigeria

The Society for Women and Children Living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria on Tuesday protested during the National Conference on HIV Prevention in Abuja.

The placards carrying members of the Society even interrupted the Minister of State for Health, Dr. Osage Ehanire, at the conference. Enya Attah, the leader of the group, said she had lived with the virus for two decades. Attah said: “I now have three children and all of them negative.”

She stated that the protest was a wake-up call to government to take full responsibility of HIV funding. “There should be political will by both federal and state governments to truthfully implement the many strategic plans and research recommendations developed by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS,” she said.

Attah flayed Nigeria’s heavy dependence on external donors (about 75 per cent) for assistance to HIV positive persons was drastically dwindling and urged the Federal Government to bridge the gap.

She called on President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint one of the persons living with HIV as Special Adviser to the President on HIV/AIDS “so that the person will provide the President with true situation on HIV response”.

The minister, who waited for the group to make its points for about 10 minutes while standing at the podium, said he had noted the demands. He explained that the government was a caring government, but was faced with many competing needs and resources had not been what it used to be.

“Both ministers of health are doctors and are mindful of the demands of people living with the virus,” Ehanire said. Ehanire, who declared the conference open, highlighted the efforts made so far toward reducing the spread of the scourge in Nigeria.

He noted that the conference was to further brainstorm on ways to tackle the spread of the virus, and treatment options for persons living with it.
The conference was organised by NACA, local and international organisations working on HIV/AIDS.

Nigeria is among the countries yet to meet the Abuja Declaration target of 15 per cent national budget commitment to health. The 2016 approved budget for health is 4.13 per cent and out of the amount allocated to health, 88.54 per cent is for recurrent expenditure, while 11.46 per cent is for capital projects.

In another HIV/Aids related story, the United States has revealed that it had disbursed over $3.4 billion to support the Nigerian HIV/AIDS response. The Consul-General, John Bray, made the disclosure at an event organized by the Public Affairs and Medical Sections of the Consulate to mark the 2016 World AIDS Day in Lagos.

According to him, this disbursement has been since the inception of its President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) in 2004.

In his remarks at the event, Mr Ibrahim Umoru, an AIDS activist in the Treatment Action Movement, said it was cheaper and smart to remain negative than to be HIV positive. Mr. Umoru urged government at all levels to intensify their AIDS programmes to reduce the burden of HIV/AIDS in the nation.

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Akin Akingbala is an international journalist based in Lagos, Nigeria. Aside being happily married, he has interests in music, sports and loves traveling.

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