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Citizenship Daily > Blog > Health > U.S. policy: FG must fund HIV/AIDS services to save youths – Durfa
Health

U.S. policy: FG must fund HIV/AIDS services to save youths – Durfa

Editor
Last updated: February 1, 2026 5:09 pm
Editor Published February 1, 2026
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The sudden seizure of funds to fight HIV/AIDS following the U.hijabS. recent policy on foreign aid, will erode all achievements and put young Nigerians at risk, an expert has said.

Dr Nandul Durfa, Managing Director, Reach Care Foundation, an HIV/AIDS care-giver outfit, told the News Agency of Nigeria(NAN), on Sunday in Abuja that the Federal Government must “fully fund” the services to avoid a relapse to the past gory days of the scourge.

Durfa was reacting to a letter from the Institute of Human Virology, Nigeria informing his outfit of the termination of the agreement to fund the services.

In the letter signed by Dr Patrick Dakum, its Chief Executive Officer, the institute said that “due to prevailing funding constraints”, the organisation is “compelled to terminate all contracts currently in force” with all respective organisations.

It said that the termination shall take effect immediately.

NAN reports that many Non-Governmental Organisations and other corporate outfits engaged in HIV/AIDS activities have shut down following a new U.S. policy halting foreign aid.

The virology institute had been the beneficiary of U. S. foreign aid routed through the United States Agency for International Development(USAID), its foreign aid agency.

NAN further reports that there had been a severe threat to global health since the U. S. freezed overseas aid with
the dismantling of USAID, which distributes tens of billions of dollars’ worth of overseas aid every year.

The U. S. also announced cuts to the agency’s workforce and the immediate suspension of almost all of its aid projects and programmes.

With the collapse of its funding base, the virology institute has, thus, stopped funding all HIV/AIDS services, a situation that has thrown the care-givers into confusion.

Durfa, while expressing regret that the USAID had been dismantled, recalled that the HIV/AIDS scourge was a major concern about 20 years ago.

“The scourge was deadly and claimed many lives.

“As then Chief Medical Director of the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, I recall we had more than 7,000 victims at a point.

“The U.S., through USAID and its programmes, helped us a lot. Nigeria was able to reduce the incidents to almost zero and we were mopping everything up.

“But, with the decision to stop the funding, the outcome is obvious – Nigeria will relapse to a worse epidemic later if no urgent measure is taken by the Federal Government.

“The government must must step into this gap to avoid a resurgence of the disease.”

Durfa said that the young population shall be the most vulnerable group to be hit by such “deadly resurgence”.

“Young boys, those less than 20 years, never experienced the HIV/AIDS scourge, let alone take measures to minimise the epidemic.

“If you stopped the funding without killing the virus, the existing virus will develop resistance.

“Even if the funds come later, a lot of grounds would have been lost.”

Durfa said that the policy reversing the funding of the services would reverse achievements recorded from 2005 to date.

He said that government must provide enough funds to procure the Anti-Retroviral Drugs, pointing out that any delay would be “very dangerous”.

“Nobody is talking about HIV/AIDS now because it has been subdued, but if there is a sudden halt in the funding, the resurgence will wash away the achievements. We shouldn’t allow that.”

Durfa, who praised former U.S. President George W. Bush for the massive support he gave to the fight against HIV/AIDS, urged young Nigerians to step up the campaign for effective funding of the fight against the scourge.

He also expressed the fear that the sudden halt in the provision of services to people living with the scourge could have “tremendous consequences”.

“As a Foundation, we have more than 500 people we are catering for; these people shall come and we have to tell them to go back as we are helpless.

“There are also most-at-risk population that we offer services to. We go to the communities, test them, and start immediate treatment for those positive.

“We do this quickly so that they do not infect others.

“Those that are negative, we offer counselling, while negative partners of positive partners are offered medical support to avoid being infected.

“We also offer legal services to victims suffering any form of abuse at work or from their partners, while also supporting victims with genital warts, Tuberculosis and other opportunistic diseases.

“We also create awareness on prevention andb treatments and encourage people to gob and be tested.”

Durfa regretted that such crucial services would come to a sudden halt, saying that it could have some “heavy ripple effects.

“We may have to run because the scourge will build up. The victims could get violent out of frustration.

“There is also fear of suicide. Victims thrown into hopelessness will consider ending their lives.

“There is also the mother-to-child transmission that we have stopped with the right drugs. That drug will no longer be available and the consequences will be dire.

“The consequences will be much. There has to be a massive funding. We need a permanent alternative funding otherwise we are sitting on a time bomb,” he said.(NAN) nannewsngr.con

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