‘People will die’: Chaos and mounting fear in Uganda as USAID cuts lead to ‘total panic’

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Donald Trump’s decision to cut vital aid has stunned health officials and
charities working to fight HIV and AIDS. One told Sky News: “Livelihoods will be
lost – and lives will be lost.”

International correspondent @sparkomat [http://twitter.com/@sparkomat]

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Monday 10 February 2025 17:14, UK

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In what will be seen as a signature act of the new Trump administration, the
president and his team have denounced and dismembered the US government’s
international assistance arm, USAID, in a matter of three weeks.

It is a decision that will have serious, real-world consequences – and the
impact is already being felt in countries such as Uganda
[https://news.sky.com/topic/uganda-7532].

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Trump latest: President doubles down on Gaza plan
[https://news.sky.com/story/trump-latest-steel-tariff-gaza-super-bowl-us-president-sky-news-live-13209921]

The health ministry in Uganda has announced its intention to shut all dedicated
HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB) clinics in the country. Stand-alone pharmacies
supplying antiretroviral drugs will also be closed.

These facilities provide HIV treatments and preventative therapies to millions
of people in Uganda, including an estimated 1.5 million currently living with
the virus.

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An official said the closure of HIV clinics was a necessary response as the
country grapples with the loss of funding from USAID.

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Directors and staff at the country’s public hospitals have been instructed to
offer the same services at their outpatients and chronic care departments.

A USAID initiative called the President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief – or
PEPFAR – has bankrolled much of Uganda’s HIV/AIDS relief plan and it’s an
initiative that has wielded impressive results.

Specially trained staff and dedicated clinics are credited with bringing
infection rates down from 19% in the late 1990s to 5% in 2024.

‘We are still reeling’

Flavia Kyomukama, from the National Forum of People Living with HIV/AIDS
Networks Uganda (NAFOPHANU), said she was stunned by Donald Trump’s decision.

“We are still reeling from the shock of what they have done, it is very
difficult to understand,” she said. “There was a memorandum of support [between
both countries], there was roadmap [towards zero infections] and they make this
decision in a day.”

Shifting HIV/AIDS-related care to public hospitals is deeply problematic, Ms
Kyomukama added.

These facilities are often overwhelmed, and they offer little, or no, privacy.
It is a serious issue in a country where those carrying the virus are badly
stigmatised.

“Surveys show 30% of health workers have a negative attitude towards people with
HIV,” Ms Kyomukama said. “So, we’re going to see [patients] dropping out [of
their treatment plans], drug resistance will increase and we will see more
violence in hospital as people with HIV get attacked.”

International correspondent

The Trump administration’s destruction of USAID will bring about the virtual
collapse of the international aid and development system, experts have warned.

The US government puts far more money into humanitarian assistance than any
other country.

In 2023, the most recent year for which data is largely complete, the Americans
disbursed $71.9bn (£57bn) in foreign aid, representing 1.2% of total US
government spending.

It is a spending commitment that has remained remarkably consistent over the
years.

The Americans underwrite programmes in 177 individual countries with Ukraine
registering as the biggest recipient in 2023. It received $16.6bn (£12.9bn) to
maintain government services after the Russian invasion.

PEPFAR, USAID’s best-known initiative, provides antiretroviral treatments to 20
million people infected with HIV/AIDS.

The initiative supports NGO-run groups with an extended workforce of 350,000
people – with many employed at local clinics.

The US also bankrolls key UN organisations, such as the refugee agency (UNHCR).
Its total budget of $4.8bn (£3.8bn) is propped up by the Americans, who put in
US$2bn (£1.6bn).

Without this funding, it is difficult to see how UNHCR can continue to support
tens of millions of refugees in countries including Sudan, Syria, Turkey and the
Democratic Republic of Congo.

If the residents of refugee camps are not supported with basic services, they
are likely to move.

The question then is how US funding compares to other donors – and the answer is
startling.

According to the UN’s real-time financial tracking service, Germany contributed
funds in 2024 representing 8% of total humanitarian aid contributions, as did
the European Union, with the United Kingdom at 6%.

The world, then, is worryingly dependent on the United States.

Former international aid worker turned consultant Thomas Byrnes said: “The
modern humanitarian system has been shaped by a long-term commitment from the
US.

“For decades, organisations like the UN agencies have relied on this predictable
funding stream to address global crises.

“The world faces a major shock and I don’t think anyone is prepared for it.”

To alleviate the situation, Mr Byrnes said other donors – such as the UK and
Germany – will need to make up the funding shortfall from USAID.

But that is highly unlikely to happen.

The United Kingdom, currently contributing $2.1bn (£1.7bn), would need to
contribute an additional $1.5bn (£1.2bn) – representing a 74% increase.

For Germany, the required extra contribution would be $1.8bn (£1.5bn),
representing a substantial increase of 70%.

Furthermore, Trump’s move comes at a time when Germany, France, Sweden and
others are planning deep cuts to international aid.

The world is looking at a colossal funding gap – and a colossal crisis – as the
number of people in need of humanitarian assistance rises to 305 million people,
Mr Byrnes added.

“We’re facing a perfect storm,” he said. “The brutal math means we’re heading
toward humanitarian aid of just 17 cents per person per day.

“This isn’t a funding dip – it’s a systemic shock that will force impossible
choices about who receives help and who doesn’t. People will die as a result of
this.”

‘It’s total panic right now’

Brian Aliganyira is the director of Ark Wellness Hub, a busy health clinic for
the LGBT+ community in Uganda’s capital, Kampala.

The clinic has sourced supplies – such as antiretroviral drugs, preventative
‘PrEP’ therapies and testing kits – from partners who are underpinned by USAID.

Now, the 37-year-old has got a major problem on his hands.

“It’s total panic right now,” he said. “Our response teams are panicking and
there is a lot of panic in the community.

“We are telling people to go home and it’s not just [our clinic]. There is no
more medication left – or maybe there’s one refill at the most. But people keep
asking us, ‘have you got any extra, any extra’?

“Without the support we need, HIV will surge and people will die.”

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‘Lives will be lost’

There are some still clinging to hope.

On 1 February, US secretary of state Marco Rubio issued a waiver
[https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQgNTpC6F5oaOnkebQokJ_2eYgM_IcQNT7alIL6R3P16Ef4Z0pmQby3Y1eHbJcTxK_yJ8EPVNiibxON/pub]
exempting the PEPFAR programme from the new administration’s cuts to foreign
aid.

However, President Trump [https://news.sky.com/topic/donald-trump-5711] issued a
contradictory order banning programmes designed to “advance equality and human
rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex people”.

Read more:
What is USAID?
[https://news.sky.com/story/usaid-what-is-the-government-agency-described-by-elon-musk-as-a-ball-of-worms-13302388]
Funding gap leaves South Africans in turmoil
[https://news.sky.com/story/usaid-crisis-leaves-south-africans-living-with-hiv-in-turmoil-13304449]

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The result in Uganda is chaos – and mounting fear.

“Really, we are grieving about this, we are grieving,” Ms Kyomukama said.
“Livelihoods will be lost – and lives will be lost.”

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