UNFPA calls for stakeholders commitment to AIDS-free future 

By: Monday Danladi, Bauchi 
The United Nations Populations Fund (UNFPA), has called that amid disruptions and funding cuts, all stakeholders must commit to an AIDS-free future.
The assertion was made by UNFPA Executive Director, Ms. Diene Keita, in a statement to commemorate the 2025 World AIDS Day, celebrated on 1st December every year.
In the message read by Deborah Tabara, Gender/Reproductive Health Analyst & State Programme Officer, UNFPA Bauchi, Diene Keita, stated that progress on HIV prevention is the surest path to an AIDS-free generation.
According to her, “Medical and public policy breakthroughs have accelerated the possibilities for protecting against HIV infection and towards expanding rights and choices for people around the world.”
The UNFPA Executive Director added that, “Groundbreaking new medications have broadened prevention options so people can choose what works best to safeguard themselves. More countries are beginning to embed HIV prevention in national health systems.”
She however stated that, “This progress is facing major setbacks. Unprecedented funding cuts in international aid have hit HIV prevention programmes particularly hard.”
According to her, “Already, the cuts have deprived nearly 2.5 million people of life-saving PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) medications. Prevention programmes have been destabilized across sub-Saharan Africa-where half of all new HIV acquisitions occurred last year.”
“Without a rapid reversal in course, the forecast is grim. By 2030, 3.3 million more people could acquire HIV. A disproportionate number of adolescent girls and young women are at risk of infection,” She added.
Diene Keita stressed that, “Girls and women aged 15 to 24 make up one quarter of all new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa. We know that AIDS increases maternal deaths, inhibits access to healthcare through fear of stigma, and is strongly associated with gender-based violence and gender inequality. This derails for them and their communities, the rights and choices of women and girls, with long-lasting consequences.”
She further stated that,”Sustaining past progress on prevention now largely depends on strong national leadership and finance, both domestic and international.”
The UNFPA Executive Director added that, “Tackling gender inequality, violence and stigma in healthcare systems and societies more broadly will be instrumental in reducing factors that put people at risk of HIV.”
Also, “Integrating HIV services into routine sexual and reproductive healthcare, including family planning and maternal health, would make them more readily available to many women and girls.”
She assured that, “At this crossroads in the AIDS response, UNFPA continues to support countries in sustaining and improving HIV prevention, particularly for adolescent girls, young women and key populations, along with providing treatment and related services.”
According to her, “The combined efforts of governments, international organizations, activists and communities have led to remarkable progress on HIV, saving nearly 27 million lives to date.”
She concluded that, “Now, we need to come together and finish what we know works and what we know is possible – an AIDS-free future for all.”
Deborah Tabara, UNFPA Programme Officer, Bauchi State