The U.S. has pulled $4 billion in HIV/AIDS aid, triggering what the UN calls a "systemic shock."
By Aniket Chakraborty
July 12, 2025
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WORLD NEWS
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Clinics are shuttered, medicine supplies have collapsed, and HIV testing has nearly halted in parts of Africa.
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UNAIDS warns: Without new funding, over 4 million could die from AIDS by 2029, and 6 million more may get infected.
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PEPFAR, the U.S.'s cornerstone AIDS relief program since 2003, is now frozen and under review.
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Nigeria’s HIV drug supply was 99.9% U.S.-funded. That lifeline is now in crisis.
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The new injectable drug Yeztugo showed 100% prevention—but pricing and access remain a barrier.
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Gilead will sell generics in 120 poor nations, but most of Latin America is excluded.
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Experts say the abrupt halt also kills surveillance systems critical to track the virus’s spread.
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Trump says aid cut is about "fairness," but health leaders call it a "vicious withdrawal."
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With lives at stake, South Africa vows to “move mountains” to keep HIV care alive—will the world follow?
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