Health
Jun 12, 2026
Funding Cuts and Repressive Laws Heighten Risk of New HIV Epidemic, UNAIDS Warns
UNAIDS warns that a steep 23% drop in foreign aid and a wave of restrictive laws are reviving the t…
Winnie Byanyima, head of UNAIDS, warned that funding cuts and repressive legislation are creating the biggest disruption to the global HIV response since its inception, putting a resurgence of the epidemic at risk.Funding Crisis and Human‑Rights Repression Threaten HIV GainsThe agency’s latest report highlights an unprecedented 23% decline in aid spending, coupled with new laws that curtail civil‑society space and target same‑sex relations, eroding decades of progress.Numbers Highlight the Scale of Setbacks570,000 AIDS‑related deaths recorded last year.1.2 million new HIV infections in the same period.Testing in high‑burden countries fell 22% year‑on‑year.Prevention services received only 11% of HIV spending in low‑ and middle‑income countries in 2024.Survey of 79 community‑led organisations showed an 85% cut in services for men who have sex with men and an 82% cut for sex workers.How Aid Cuts and Restrictive Laws Undermine PreventionReduced funding has slashed condom distribution, medication for pre‑exposure prophylaxis, and community‑led outreach. New domestic financing is skewed toward treatment rather than prevention, leaving vulnerable groups without essential services.Legislation such as Uganda’s “sovereignty bill” restricts external funding for civil‑society groups, further marginalising organisations that historically delivered HIV services to high‑risk populations.Outlook: Rising Infections and Mortality on the HorizonByanyima predicts “rising new infections, and rising numbers of people dying of HIV‑related illness” if the current trajectory continues. The agency plans a working group proposal for October, envisioning a smaller but more dispersed UN joint programme to sustain the response.
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#Winnie Byanyima
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