HealthHIV & AIDS UPDATE

Growing Anti-Rights Movements Threaten Global Fight Against AIDS

1 Mins read

By Bunmi Yekini

On Zero Discrimination Day 2025, global health advocates are raising alarms over a surge in anti-rights and anti-gender movements, warning that these trends could reverse hard-won gains in the fight against HIV/AIDS.

UNAIDS’ 2024 report emphasized that ending AIDS by 2030 requires sustained political and financial investment, alongside human rights protections. However, recent crackdowns on marginalized communities—particularly the LGBTIQ+ population and women seeking reproductive healthcare—are pushing millions away from essential health services, experts say.

East African nations have seen some of the most aggressive legislative actions. Uganda’s 2024 Anti-Homosexuality Act criminalized LGBTIQ+ identities, leading to increased violence and barriers to HIV treatment. In Kenya, restrictive reproductive health policies have limited access to care for young women, while new laws attempt to further criminalize the LGBTIQ+ community. Ghana also proposed similar legislation.

“These laws don’t just fuel discrimination—they make HIV prevention nearly impossible,” said a UNAIDS spokesperson. “People are being driven underground, afraid to seek treatment.”

The reinstatement of the U.S. Global Gag Rule in 2025 further threatens reproductive health access in low-income countries, where U.S. funding plays a crucial role in healthcare systems. Critics argue that such policies, coupled with criminalization of HIV transmission, discourage testing and treatment, undermining global efforts to curb new infections.

Advocates are calling for governments to repeal discriminatory laws, strengthen funding for HIV responses, and reinvest in rights-based health strategies. Without urgent action, experts warn, the goal of an AIDS-free world by 2030 may slip out of reach.

Related posts
HealthNews

Nigerian Medical Research Institute hit by Strike as Tenure Policy Dispute Deepens

2 Mins read
…Researchers halt lab work, unions divided as management insists it is enforcing federal directive By Juliet Umeh A major disruption has gripped…
HealthNews

Nigerian Research Union Begins Strike Over Retirement Policy at NIMR

1 Mins read
By Bunmi Yekini The Academic Staff Union of Research Institutions (ASURI) has declared an indefinite strike at the Nigerian Institute of Medical…
HealthHIV & AIDS UPDATE

amfAR Report Raises Concerns over U.S. HIV Programme Oversight under New Global Health Strategy

1 Mins read
By Bunmi Yekini The amfAR on Tuesday warned that new agreements underpinning the United States’ global HIV response risk weakening oversight and…
Subscribe To Our Newsletters 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.