Responding to the passing of the Anti-Homosexuality Bill by the Ugandan Parliament, UNAIDS has warned that its passing into law would undermine Uganda’s efforts to end AIDS by 2030, by violating fundamental human rights including the right to health and the very right to life.
Ministers and representatives from twelve African countries have committed themselves, and laid out their plans, to end AIDS in children by 2030. International partners have set out how they would support countries in delivering on those plans, which were issued at the first ministerial meeting of the Global Alliance to end AIDS in children.
UNAIDS welcomes the judgement by the High Court of Kenya at Nairobi recognizing that coerced sterilization of women living with HIV is a violation of their human rights.
Following a one-week visit to Tanzania and Zanzibar to launch the 2022 Global World AIDS Day report; to commemorate World AIDS Day; and to see first-hand the extraordinary work of joint efforts by the government, partners and communities to end AIDS in Tanzania and Zanzibar, UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima issued the following statement
Tanzania became the 13th African country to join the Education Plus Initiative, committing to provide greater investments to ensure boys and girls complete secondary school.