The Uganda AIDS Commission (UAC) and AHF Uganda Cares, organisation HIV/AIDS services, have called for allocation of Shs300 billion to cater for critical drugs and laboratory supplies.
Officials from the two organisations made this appeal on Tuesday, 11 February 2025 while appearing before the Committee on Health chaired by Hon. Joseph Ruyonga.
Their call follows the withdrawal of funding to USAID due to the recent executive orders issued by the President of the United States.
The Director of Planning and Strategic Information at the UAC, Vincent Bagambe warned that the withdrawal of U.S. funding will derail Uganda’s progress in combating HIV/AIDS.
“We are at a critical juncture. Uganda has made significant strides in reducing new infections and AIDS-related deaths, but the sudden cut in funding puts these gains at risk. We need an additional Shs300 billion to ensure uninterrupted access to treatment, laboratory monitoring, and other essential services,” he said.
The policy brief noted that Uganda spends approximately Shs1.9 trillion annually on HIV services with 60 per cent of this funding coming from donors, primarily the U.S. government through President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).
Bagambe added that the executive orders have halted grant disbursements, leading to uncertainty among implementing partners, some of whom have already begun closing clinics and laying off staff.
“If we do not act swiftly, we risk a crisis where thousands of people living with HIV may not receive their medication, increasing the chances of drug resistance and new infections,” Bagambe added.
The UAC further called for an increase in the HIV Mainstreaming allocation from the current 0.1 per cent to 0.5 per cent of the national budget. This adjustment will generate an additional Shs200 billion helping to sustain vital prevention and treatment services.
“The current allocation is inadequate. Increasing it to 0.5 per cent will ensure that critical interventions such as viral load monitoring, counselling services, and logistics for antiretroviral distribution continue without disruption,” Bagambe said.
According to the latest statistics from the UAC, Uganda has 1.49 million people living with HIV, with a prevalence rate of 5.1 per cent.
In 2023 alone, there were 38,000 new infections and 20,000 AIDS-related deaths. Young people aged 15-24, particularly adolescent girls and young women, remain the most affected demographic.
Flavia Kyomukama from the National Forum of People Living with HIV stated that with the freeze of funding, the stand alone ART clinics, youth centres, shelters and safe spaces for people treating HIV/Aids are being phased out and this will limit access to medication , counselling and also worsen stigma.
She warned the USAID exit is not just a freeze, but “a freeze on our lives, a freeze on our bloodline; we are slowly dying, and we are asking our Parliament to represent us,” she added.
Trevor Emojel, a Youth Officer at Uganda Cares asked Parliament to support the manufacturer of ART by giving tax breaks and low interest financing and waivers and supporting Quality Chemicals among others.
He also called for the fast tracking of HIV sustainable strategy and ensure its full financing.
The UNAIDS Country Director Jacqueline Makokha, said that a local solution between the government, partners and civil society need to come up with a strategy stating that it will be tough but more sustainable.
“We need to come up with our own home grown solutions; solutions will not come from outside. It has to come from us internally who are facing this situation,” she said.