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Press Release
Global celebrities unite behind UNAIDS’ call for world leaders to “take the rights path to end AIDS”
01 December 2024 01 December 2024GENEVA, 1 December 2024 — This World AIDS Day (1 December), sixteen global celebrities, including Hollywood film star Luke Evans and singer-songwriter Sia of the Unstoppable hit song, are uniting behind UNAIDS’ call for world leaders to protect human rights, which they say is vital to ensuring the success of efforts to end AIDS.
The celebrities, including actress and comedian Margaret Cho; comedian and poet Alok Vaid-Menon; fashion designer and television personality Tan France; actor Alan Cumming; actor, broadcaster and comedian Stephen Fry; actress Uzo Aduba; Moroccan artist OUM; South African actress Thuso Mbedu; Chinese actor and singer Huang Xiaoming; professional football player Racheal Kundananji; Pakistani-British actor and comedian Mawaan Rizwan; Filipino model and actress Pia Wurtzbach; Ukrainian singer and TV show host Vera Brezhneva; and popular television presenter Erkin Ryzkullbekov have come together in support of UNAIDS call to “Take the rights path to end AIDS.”
“The choice is clear if we want to end AIDS as a public health threat. World leaders must take the rights path to protect people’s right to health and life. When human rights are respected and guaranteed, their lives are greatly improved because they can freely seek healthcare, including HIV prevention and treatment.” said Stephen Fry, broadcaster and comedian.
“In far too many countries, people are still criminalized for being who they are or for who they love. When LGBTQ+ people are criminalized, they are driven underground and out of reach of health services, including services to prevent and treat HIV.” said Alok Vaid-Menon, American comedian and poet.
The report highlights gaps in the realization of human rights and shows how violations of human rights are obstructing the end of the AIDS pandemic.
63 countries still criminalize LGBTQ+ people.
Discrimination against girls and women, from denial of education to denial of protection from gender-based violence, is also undermining progress in the global HIV response. In 2023, women and girls accounted for 62% of new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa.
“We all win the fight against AIDS when human rights and the right to health are secured for everyone everywhere. We can end AIDS as a public health threat by promoting rights, respect and dignity for all." said, Margaret Cho, actress and comedian.
“When girls cannot get access to education and information, when young women cannot access HIV prevention and testing, they are put at much greater risk of acquiring HIV,” said Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of UNAIDS.
In 2023 alone, 1.3 million people around the world were newly infected with HIV—three times higher than the global target set for 2025 of no more than 370 000 new infections.
“To protect everyone’s health, we need to protect everyone’s rights,”
UNAIDS World AIDS Day report, “Take the rights path to end AIDS”, shows that the world can end AIDS—if the human rights of people living with or affected by HIV are respected, protected and fulfilled, to ensure equitable, accessible and high-quality HIV services.
UNAIDS
The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
World AIDS Day report 2024


Press Release
UNAIDS calls for an end to violence against women and girls. No excuses
25 November 2024 25 November 2024GENEVA, 25 November 2024—Gender-based violence persists as one of the most appalling violations of human rights. It also thwarts efforts to end AIDS as a public health threat because intimate partner violence is linked with a heightened risk of HIV acquisition among women and undermines access to testing and treatment.
Globally, one in eight women and girls experiences sexual violence before the age of 18. Harmful gender norms, low prioritization of safe, qualitative and affordable sexual and reproductive health services, as well as fragile health systems heighten women’s risk of contracting HIV and prevent access to HIV services.
In addition, women and girls living with HIV are too often stigmatized by health service providers. They also experience pressure not to have children, forced and coerced sterilization or termination of a pregnancy. All violations of human rights.
“We must counter patriarchy and poverty to keep girls in school and we must provide women and girls safe spaces, economic opportunities and ensure their recognition and leadership,” said Winnie Byanyima, UNAIDS Executive Director.
“We must also fight rigid gender norms and stereotypes that perpetuate unhealthy masculinity and violence based on gender."
Gender-related killings of women and girls are the deadliest outcome of gender-based violence with a woman being killed every 11 minutes. This is unacceptable. In 2022, the number of women and girls killed intentionally – nearly 89,000 – is the highest yearly number recorded in the past 20 years. Women from key populations – transgender women, sex workers, and LGBTQ+ human rights defenders - are also at particular risk of femicide according to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).
On the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women this year, the campaign kicked off with the theme ‘UNiTE to End Violence against Women and Girls: Towards Beijing +30.’ These 16 Days of Activism remind us that 30 years after the Beijing declaration - a blueprint for achieving gender equality and women’s and girls’ rights everywhere - the world is far from such a gender equal world.
UNAIDS remains committed to working collaboratively with governments, business, civil society, communities and especially women’s movements and networks to create a world where the rights and dignity of all women and girls are respected and protected, including women and girls living with, at risk of and affected by HIV.
Started in 1991, the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence is an international campaign that kicks off on 25 November, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, and runs until 10 December, Human Rights.
UNAIDS
The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.




Feature Story
To end AIDS, communities mobilize to engage men and boys
04 December 2024
04 December 2024 04 December 2024Michael Onyango rises before dawn in his Nairobi apartment and catches a train eight hours east to Kilifi, a coastal town north of Mombasa. Resorts populate Kilifi’s sandy beaches and narrow wooden boats dot the water. Onyango heads inland to meet with the Kilifi County health management team, before dashing to an assembly of peer outreach workers from across the districts of Kaloleni, Malindi and Kilifi North.
Onyango runs the Movement of Men Against HIV in Kenya (MMAHK), spearheading a community-led monitoring initiative in the region to address the high numbers of men and boys who lack access to HIV services. In Kenya, only 65 percent of the men and boys over 15 years of age who are living with HIV are on antiretroviral therapy, compared to 80 percent of women and girls. The trend is mirrored globally: in 2024, the WHO and UNAIDS released data that men lagged on progress in achieving the 95-95-95 targets. Worldwide just 83 percent of men living with HIV know their status; 72 percent are on treatment and only 67 percent are virally suppressed.
MMAHK, in collaboration with the Masculinity Institute (MAIN), the International Network of Religious Leaders (INERELA+Kenya) and the UNAIDS Kenya country office, came together to tackle these service gaps in Kilifi County, which surrounds the town of the same name. The area, home to around 1.5 million residents, extends westward from the Indian Ocean and supports livelihoods through fisheries, factories, cashew nut mills, and farming.
In Kilifi, peer data collectors have identified that health facilities need to change their opening days and hours to accommodate the work and school day.
Community organizers are also working to challenge harmful prejudices that assert that men visiting a health facility or seeking an HIV test are “weak”.
As they rapidly roll-out peer support groups to challenge these beliefs, Onyango has had flashbacks to the pandemic’s earlier phases, when in the 1990s he worked as a counselor in a Nairobi hospital. HIV treatment was not yet available. “Many men I met who found out they were positive would resign from their jobs, go to their rural homes, sell their property, and wait to die,” Onyango said.
In 2001, Onyango and others started MMAHK to create a safe space for men to talk about their health needs. MMAHK also ran community testing, workplace outreach and targeted advocacy with religious and cultural leaders. As grassroots initiatives challenged harmful gender norms, Onyango saw social stigma and self-stigma among men decrease across Kenya. But the past few years have seen a resurgence of harmful norms around masculinity.
Onyango shares that the shift in funding away from many community initiatives, which were seen as harder to measure than biomedical interventions, has hampered community engagement efforts. Both are needed, he says. For example, although HIV treatment and voluntary male circumcision are now available in Kenya, cultural factors prevent some men from accessing these services.
A regional strategy developed in 2022 by UNAIDS, WHO, UN Women and partners –“Male Engagement in HIV Testing, Treatment and Prevention in East and Southern Africa” – outlines four key approaches: Improve access to health for men and boys and decrease vulnerability; prevent HIV among men and boys; diagnose more men and boys living with HIV; and increase the proportion of men and boys accessing and adhering to antiretroviral therapy.
“Tackling harmful masculinity also has a ripple effect,” reflects Lycias Zembe, a UNAIDS advisor in Geneva. “Harmful gender norms affect everyone, and changing these norms creates a better environment for women and girls and for men and boys.”
Community initiatives like MMAHK remain key. To challenge gender norms, MMAHK positions service access as courageous, and educates men that discussing emotions is a sign of strength. At 63, Onyango shows no signs of slowing down: “We’re going to keep addressing self-stigma and figure out how to help men access the services that they need to stay healthy,” he said. “We don’t have any other option.”
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Feature Story
PrEP for her: Cambodia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines prepare to introduce the Dapivirine ring to help prevent HIV
22 November 2024
22 November 2024 22 November 2024The only HIV prevention that Elena Felix knew of was condoms. But condoms were not something that she was able to make use of, and she contracted HIV. Thirty years after her diagnosis, she’s helped conduct research to determine whether women in the Philippines would use a more confidential tool, and one that does not need a man to agree, to lower women’s risk of HIV infection.
“We hear from women that some partners insist on not using condoms. We hear cases too of rape. Women need protection that does not depend on men” the Association of Positive Women Advocates founder explained.
The Dapivirine Vaginal Ring or DVR was given the green light by the World Health Organization for women at high risk of contracting HIV in 2021. Unlike other types of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), this one is exclusively for women. It is a silicone vaginal ring that is inserted and worn for 28 days before being replaced. It releases an antiretroviral drug locally, reducing the risk of HIV infection through vaginal sex by half.
Since its introduction, the technology was made available in several (11) African countries. And with good reason. Around two-thirds of new HIV infections in Eastern and southern Africa and Western and central Africa are among adolescent girls and women. The combination prevention strategies implemented in these two regions have super-charged progress, driving the global 39% decline in new infections since 2010.
But the Asia Pacific picture is quite different.
“This region has an HIV prevention crisis,” Eamonn Murphy, UNAIDS Regional Director for Asia Pacific and Eastern Europe Central Asia said. “And I am not speaking only of the countries where new infections have doubled, tripled or increased six times since 2010. The average regional decline in new infections is far too slow. At 13% it has virtually flatlined.”
He was speaking to a group of community, government, research and development partners from Cambodia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines who met from November 11 – 12 in Bangkok. Findings were disseminated from a DVR acceptability and feasibility study conducted by ThinkPlace, and a discussion held on next steps. UNAIDS and the World Health Organization (WHO) are providing technical support for this initiative. The Australia Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) funded the research as part of its ongoing support for prevention work in the region.
Seven percent of new infections in Asia Pacific are among sex workers while 12 percent occur among the intimate partners of key populations. Angeli Achrekar, UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director, called for women in Asia and the Pacific to be provided more HIV prevention options.
“Choice is the way to go!” Ms Achrekar stressed. “Providing options in prevention tools and service delivery increases overall use and results. We must ensure that people have access and that they are supported with the appropriate policies and enabling environment. The ring has great potential to be empowering as an additional choice for women, including in Asia Pacific.”
A person newly acquires HIV in the Asia Pacific region every two minutes. Despite this, the overall momentum on rolling out pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) options has been sluggish. At the end of 2023 there were just 204,000 PrEP users in this region, 98% short of the 8,200,000 target by 2025. The vast majority of those on PrEP were men.
ThinkPlace Regional Director, Elliot Duffy, revealed that overall, the studies found women have high interest in this discreet, woman-controlled prevention method. Sex workers in the four countries sought the DVR given their high vulnerability to sexual violence. And in all countries the sex workers indicated that they would want to access the DVR through community-based health services or their local healthcare facilities. The research also found that healthcare providers in the four countries were enthusiastic about offering this new prevention option.
“The number one barrier is the extent to which women understand how the ring would fit. Many had questions like, “would it be lost in my body? Will I feel pain? Will I be able to have sex?’ Some women worried about a partner thinking they distrusted them,” Mr Duffy explained. “The DVR is not immune to the challenges of other HIV programs and continued effort is needed to increase awareness, generate demand and create services that are accessible.”
Already the research findings have resulted in the introduction and phased implementation of the DVR into 2024 – 2026 Global Fund grant implementation for Cambodia and Indonesia. Cambodia has begun pilot testing. At the meeting the four country teams developed plans to guide their next steps, including on further research, legal and policy reviews, regulatory approvals and community system strengthening.
DFAT Health Adviser, Joshua Metcalf-Wallach, emphasized that as stakeholders switched gears from research to rollout, they should keep communities in the driver’s seat.
“Our Indo-Pacific prevention work has shown that HIV services work best when they are key population- and community-led. As we expand prevention options for women, let us be guided by their needs and demands,” he ended.
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Feature Story
Upholding dignity for everyone: Ariadne Ribeiro Ferreira
21 November 2024
21 November 2024 21 November 2024Now 43 years old, Ariadne Ribeiro Ferreira, a trans woman working for UNAIDS in Brazil, advocates to leaders and speaks to media around the world. As she is an inspiration to colleagues, many are keen to learn more about Ariadne’s story.
From a young age, Ariadne sensed that she was different from those around her. “When my sister arrived, I understood, as a child, that I was like her,” Ariadne recalls.
Ariadne's situation, already challenging, became dangerous when her mother remarried. “My stepfather would beat me almost every day, berating me for my lifestyle,” she recalls.
At just 13, Ariadne was forced to flee her home. "I had no choice," she remembers. Despite these difficulties, she was fortunate to have a caring grandmother who took her in and provided support. “My grandmother was different from the rest of the family. She was like a teacher to me,” Ariadne reflects. Her grandma had a transgender friend named Zeze, an activist who also inspired her.
At the age of eighteen while living with her grandmother, Ariadne’s life took a turn when she heard on the radio that a local hospital would begin offering sex change surgeries with state support. “My grandma was overjoyed at the news and danced for me,” Ariadne recalls with a smile. Shortly after Ariadne began her transition.
However, that same year she experienced a traumatic event when she contracted HIV after being raped. Despite this devastating ordeal, she refused to give up. She began treatment and continued her life with determination and resilience.
By the age of 24, she had completed all her surgeries, and she had been legally registered a woman. Ariadne officially changed her name on all her documents.
She pursued education to open up opportunities. “I had the chance to specialize at UNIFESP, the second-best university in Brazil. Since then, I have continued my education, earning a specialization, a master’s degree, and recently a Ph.D.”
Ariadne began her healthcare career in Itanhaém, where she worked in a peer education program at a health facility and contributed to a cooperation agreement with the State Government. “I focused on HIV prevention programs, gaining visibility as one of the few transgender professionals at the time,” she explains. “This recognition opened up new opportunities for me.”
Reflecting on her proudest achievements, Ariadne highlights her work with homeless individuals in São Paulo, Brazil and her role in establishing the state’s first shelter for homeless transgender people. Following these accomplishments, she joined UNAIDS in 2019, where she continues to advocate for transgender rights and supports people living with and affected by HIV, using her voice to uplift and empower others.
Ariadne's makes use of her extensive experience to champion the rights and well-being of everyone living with HIV, including UN staff. Working with UN Plus, she is pioneering innovative strategies to uphold dignity in every workplace. Building a future free from stigma and discrimination, say Ariadne and UN Plus, is how to enable everyone to perform at their best, and to thrive.
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Feature Story
Evelyn Siula: A journey of strength and solidarity
18 November 2024
18 November 2024 18 November 2024After Evelyn Siula’s husband died, she knew she had to get tested for HIV. The result came back as positive.
"I had prepared myself mentally for either outcome, but it was still a shock."
She was jobless and with three children to care for.
The stigma and discrimination surrounding the virus meant that many people were scared to disclose their status. "I had three friends whose families rejected them because their HIV status became known,” Evelyn shares.
But Evelyn chose to break the silence early, starting by telling her young daughter. Family support played a crucial role in Evelyn’s journey. Her family stood by her, offering constant encouragement and strength, vital for getting through the many challenges.
Stigma followed Evelyn. She recalls a particularly painful moment: “At a community gathering, someone pointed at me and asked, ‘Can you believe she’s HIV-positive?’ It was one of the worst experiences being talked about like that.”
Evelyn became a strong advocate for people living with HIV, standing up to stigma everywhere, including in her church. At a gathering in a church, when a speaker criticized people living with HIV, she shared her own status as HIV-positive and as a church elder. Her openness has helped challenge stigma and gain support. Through her work she learned that many fellow church members were struggling in silence, and so helped create the Livingstonia Synod Positive Christians group, known as LISAP+.
Despite her bold advocacy, Evelyn acknowledges how mental health challenges, particularly fear and anxiety, have affected her. “I have thoughts like: ‘What if something happens to me? What if I die?’ I worry about my children and how they would manage without me. These are the fears that raise my blood pressure.”
But over time, Evelyn’s diagnosis has become not just a challenge but also a source of strength.
Today, Evelyn works for UNAIDS and is the vice chair of the UN Plus Advisory Group. She is proud to show that people living with HIV are leading healthy and productive lives.
She has completed Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in business administration. “The day I graduated with my Master’s degree was extra special because I graduated alongside my eldest son. It’s rare for a mother and son to share such a moment.”
Evelyn encourages everyone to ensure they know their HIV status as the first step to taking control of their health: “Please get tested. It's just a status. If you're positive, follow the advice of your doctors. There is full life after testing HIV positive. Take your medication religiously, eat well, and live a healthy life.”
“Never stigmatize anyone,” says Eveyln, “because we are all one.”
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Feature Story
New Asia Pacific healthcare provider toolkit serves people having chemsex
13 November 2024
13 November 2024 13 November 2024Life became chaotic for Poon early. (Not his real name.)
As a gay teenager he was bullied at school by students and teachers. He moved in with his grandparents when his parents separated, but eventually left northern Thailand for Bangkok. There he survived through sex work.
Then Poon learned he was living with HIV. The weight of HIV prejudice merged with the stigma he already carried as a young gay man and sex worker. Some friends he made at a camp disclosed his HIV status online after an argument. He was diagnosed with major depressive disorder.
A partner introduced him to drug-use during sex. He went on to use multiple substances including methamphetamines and cocaine.
“Sex, drugs and alcohol are my escape,” he said.
This was one of the stories shared at the 6th Asia Pacific Chemsex Symposium (APCS). Held in Bangkok on November 6 and 7, the event brought together over 300 stakeholders from 27 countries. They shared their research and responses to a practice that remains largely hidden and not yet well understood. The event specifically explored pleasure as opposed to risk as an entry point for providing services.
Chemsex—also called High Fun in several Asian countries—refers to the use of stimulant drugs during sexual activity. It lowers inhibitions and may increase risk-taking. There are several public health implications including higher rates of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), lower adherence to treatment, overdose and the fallout linked with intoxication.
In Asia Pacific four of every five new HIV infections are among people from key population communities including men who have sex with men or MSM, people who use drugs, people in prisons or other closed settings, sex workers and transgender people. Young people make up a quarter of all new HIV infections and in some countries around half of new infections are among youth ages 15 to 24.
Several countries in the region are facing an HIV prevention crisis with new infections among MSM either increasing or decreasing far too slowly. In 2023, 43% of new infections in Asia-Pacific were among MSM. At the same time, there is evidence that the practice of chemsex in this community ranges from 3% to 31% depending on the country. But although chemsex is most visible in the MSM community, it is practiced by people from all populations.
“We are talking about sex and drugs—two topics that people call taboo,” said Brigitte Quenum, UNAIDS Regional Team Lead for Sciences, Systems and Services at the opening ceremony. “But as HIV has taught us, to reach people, we must confront the realities of their lives.”
Toolkit now available for Asia Pacific health workers
On day 2 of the symposium UNAIDS and UNODC launched the first-ever toolkit on chemsex for Asia Pacific clinical service providers. The toolkit was developed by the Australian Society for HIV, Viral Hepatitis and Sexual Health Medicine (ASHM). It is geared toward health workers in Asia and the Pacific working with men who have sex with men and transgender women.
"The increasing use of stimulant drugs in the region, including for ‘Chemsex’, poses significant health risks, including drug use disorders and various psychosocial challenges," said Masood Karimipour, Regional Representative of UNODC’s Office for Southeast Asia and the Pacific. "This UNAIDS-UNODC toolkit provides essential guidance for healthcare providers to address these challenges through evidence-based interventions. It emphasizes the importance of holistic, non-judgmental care that prioritizes the physical, psychological and social wellbeing of individuals, while ensuring access to harm reduction services and the prevention and treatment of drug use disorders within a comprehensive continuum of care."
The resource was created to support comprehensive clinical services in the region’s restrictive legal environments. Twenty-eight countries in Asia Pacific criminalise drug possession for personal use while 17 criminalise same-sex relations. Penalties for drug-related offences in the region are among the world’s harshest.
The toolkit was developed through consultation with clinicians, community representatives and government agencies. It covers chemsex basics as well as approaches to harm reduction, sexual health, and mental health services. It also covers different service delivery models including face-to-face, online and by communities. The toolkit offers guides and tools on topics such as initiating non-judgmental conversations and risk assessment.
“Stronger HIV prevention strategies tailored to chemsex are needed, along with expanded, inclusive services for sexual, physical and mental health,” said Suniya Taimour, UNAIDS’ Community-led Responses Advisor for Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Thia approach recognises that comprehensive health services can be lifesavers by using one point of contact to address multiple issues including physical, sexual and mental health as well as social issues. Poon is a living example. He has benefitted from a service package that has combined his HIV treatment with harm reduction interventions and psychiatric care. Today he is a 22-year-old university student with clear life goals who feels more empowered about his HIV status.
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Press Release
UNAIDS appoints the artist OUM as National Goodwill Ambassador in Morocco
02 November 2024 02 November 2024MHAMID AL GHIZLANE, 2 November 2024 — The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) is pleased to announce the appointment of renowned Moroccan artist OUM as its National Goodwill Ambassador in Morocco. The prestigious announcement was made at the Taragalte Festival, held from November 1-3, 2024, in Mhamid El Ghizlane, where OUM proudly serves as the festival's ‘Godmother.’ OUM’s influence and commitment to social change will play a vital role in UNAIDS' efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in Morocco and beyond.
“OUM’s appointment as National Goodwill Ambassador is a powerful step forward in our efforts to fight against HIV in Morocco,” said Houssine El Rhilani, UNAIDS Country Director for Morocco. “Her artistic influence and commitment to social causes will help amplify our messages of prevention, tolerance, and support for people living with HIV.”
In her new role, OUM will work to promote awareness and education around HIV prevention. She will also focus on fighting against the stigma and discrimination faced by people living with HIV. “As an artist, I have a platform to reach many people. It is my duty to use my voice to advocate for people living with and affected by HIV who are often unheard,” said OUM. “I am honored to take on this role with UNAIDS and am committed to supporting the fight against HIV in Morocco.”
Morocco faces significant challenges in the fight against HIV, with approximately 23,000 people currently living with the virus. The National Integrated Strategic Plan for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, and STIs (2024-2030) outlines essential actions to strengthen HIV prevention efforts and improve access to care, particularly for populations most affected by HIV. OUM's role as an ambassador is vital in driving these efforts forward.
OUM is no stranger to social advocacy, having previously collaborated with various United Nations agencies. Her engagement includes speaking on international platforms and participating in initiatives promoting women's rights and education. The official ceremony for OUM’s appointment highlighted her commitment to raising awareness around HIV issues in Morocco. It featured speeches from local leaders, including representatives from the region of Zagora and the Ministry of Health and Social Protection. The festival itself serves as a cultural backdrop, emphasizing the power of music and art in promoting peace and social change.
As UNAIDS continues its mission to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030, collaboration with influential figures like OUM is crucial. Her role as National Goodwill Ambassador will not only increase awareness but also inspire collective action to ensure that all people affected by HIV, regardless of their status, have access to the care and support they need.
UNAIDS
The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
Region/country




Feature Story
Empowering youth to lead Togo’s HIV response
31 October 2024
31 October 2024 31 October 2024In Togo, youth and adolescents living with HIV are stepping forward to lead the response against the AIDS epidemic. Through resilience, determination, and a collective vision, they have come together to form a new youth-led network called the Network of Positive Children, Adolescents and Youth Innovating for Renewal (REAJIR+), This grassroots initiative is dedicated to amplifying the voices of all children, adolescents and young people affected by HIV, and is a testament to the power of youth leadership in shaping their future. “We felt the need to create a space where young people living with HIV could be heard and represented,” says Sitsope Adjovi Husunukpe, Executive Director and one of the founding members of the network. “Many of us felt that our needs and concerns, although important, were not given priority in the development and implementation of policies and interventions relating to HIV prevention and care.”
The network’s creation was not without problems. In Togo, where leadership is often adult-driven, it took courage and determination to establish an organization run by and for young people. "Even though we faced difficulties, we knew we had to persist," explains Adjovi. "The environment wasn’t always supportive, but we kept believing in the vision of our network. We wanted to ensure that young people living with HIV, from all walks of life, had a space to advocate for their rights."
The need for young people to be involved in the response to HIV in Togo is clear. According to recent reports, only about 26% of young people aged 15-24 have enough knowledge about how to prevent HIV.[1] Children's performance in terms of adherence to HIV treatment is below the general average of 80.5%[2]. At the same time, 6,200 children aged 0 to 14 are living with HIV[3]. In Western and Central Africa, at least 16% of girls and 12% of boys aged 15-24 have sex before they turn 15[4]. These numbers show that more needs to be done to help young people understand HIV to protect themselves.
“Empowering young people goes beyond raising awareness; it’s about unlocking their potential to drive change. When they take ownership of their advocacy, they become catalysts for progress, shaping solutions that resonate in their communities. By equipping them with the right tools, we invest in a future led by those who understand the challenges firsthand.” says Dr Yayé Kanny Diallo, UNAIDS Country Director for Togo and Benin.
Koffi Emmanuel Hounsime, the network’s president, echoes the importance of youth-led advocacy. “At the beginning, people questioned our legitimacy. They asked, ‘Who are you representing?’ But once we formalized our network and built our credibility, we gained respect. Now, when we speak, we speak with authority on behalf of youth living with HIV across the country.”
Despite these hurdles, the network remains committed to its mission. “We are working not just for ourselves but for the future generation of young people living with HIV,” says Adjovi. "We want to ensure that we have better support, better care improving our life quality, and that we feel empowered to take decisions concerning our own well-being."
The network has already made significant strides. It has actively participated in national HIV dialogues and contributed to the development of the new Global Fund HIV grant, ensuring that the priorities of adolescents and young people are included.
For these young leaders, creating the network is about more than just advocacy. It’s about survival, empowerment, and hope. Emmanuel reflects, “We didn’t just create this network to represent young people, we created it to change lives. Every day, we’re working to make sure that no young person living with HIV feels alone.”
[1] AIDS INFO Togo Country Data
[2] Rapport REDES Togo 2023
[3] AIDS Info Togo Country Data
[4] UNESCO Education Report
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Press Release
Experts back G20 action to tackle pandemics by addressing the inequalities which drive them and by boosting production of medicines in every region of the world
29 October 2024 29 October 2024RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL, 29 October 2024—Today, at a special event organized for the G20 Joint Finance and Health Ministerial, the Brazilian government and experts from the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics backed calls for efforts to break the “inequality-pandemic cycle” that is fueling continued disease emergencies. Two crucial measures could enable the world to tackle current and future pandemics.
They urged leaders to recognise, for the first time in G20 history, inequality as a driver of pandemics, requiring both measurement and decisive action. They also championed boosting the development, production and supply of life-saving health products in every region of the world.
Evidence gathered by the Global Council on Inequality clearly demonstrates the inequality-pandemics cycle. Inequalities within countries and between them deepen the disruption and loss of life in current and recent pandemics, from AIDS to COVID, mpox and Ebola. Failure to address these inequalities is leaving communities across the world vulnerable and exposed to future outbreaks. This presents an important opportunity for the G20, which sets the agenda for international financing, to focus attention and action on the social determinants of pandemics.
The dependence of countries across the Global South on medicine production in the Global North has also been shown to undermine pandemic responses. They are consistently last in line to receive life-saving vaccines and medicines, despite bearing much of the world’s disease burden.
Nísia Trindade, Brazil’s Minister of Health, who is also a member of the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics, declared: “By building production capacity in every region, we can learn from past mistakes by ensuring that medicines for neglected and socially determined diseases are made around the world and that capacity is available to respond swiftly to future outbreaks.”
Joseph E. Stiglitz, Nobel Prize Winning Economist, Co-Chair of the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics, explained: “Reforms in both the developed and developing countries and in international agreements and institutions, and investments which help broaden the production of medical products and reduce prices are vital to address market failures and accelerate access to medicines for the people in greatest need.”
Sir Michael Marmot, Professor of Epidemiology and Director of the Institute of Health Equity at University College London, Co-Chair of the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics noted: “The evidence is clear: social determinants increase the intensity of pandemics. The greater the inequality in society, the worse is the pandemic. But we also know we can intervene against these with education, social protection measures, and making societies more fair. Re-investing in the public good and upholding of human rights will make societies less vulnerable to pandemics.”
H.E. Monica Geingos, former First Lady of Namibia and Co-Chair of the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics set out: “To effectively end the AIDS pandemic and prepare for future health crises, we must confront the complex web of inequalities that exacerbate these challenges. Inequality encompasses more than just income disparities; it includes social, political, and health inequities that intersect in significant ways. The geopolitical landscape further complicates these dynamics, as nations characterized by pronounced inequality are disproportionately impacted by the responses to pandemics. This systemic inequality is often reinforced by international frameworks that perpetuate and deepen existing disparities, underscoring the urgent need for comprehensive and equitable approaches to health and governance.”
The two initiatives—addressing inequality as a pandemic driver and the move to boost regional health product production— offer a unique opportunity for G20 leaders to take transformative action towards greater health equity and global health security, speakers agreed.
Winnie Byanyima, UNAIDS Executive Director and Convenor of the Inequality Council, remarked: "President Lula has put equality at the heart of Brazil’s G20 agenda. He is right. Inequalities need to be addressed urgently, and the production of medicines and vaccines expanded across the world, or the next pandemic will hit us even harder. G20 leaders here in Rio have the opportunity to transform the way the world responds to outbreaks and pandemics by tackling the inequalities which drive them. We are counting on G20 leaders to seize this moment to save lives and protect the health of everyone.”
Joe Phaahla, Deputy Minister of Health, South Africa, confirmed: “As we assume the G20 presidency in 2025, South Africa will continue to champion the agenda of universal health coverage through equity, solidarity and innovation.”
Tributes were paid to the Ministry of Health in Brazil for its leadership in advancing these critical issues at the G20, including proposing a new Global Coalition for Regional Production, Innovation and Equitable Access and including social determinants of pandemics in the work of the G20 Joint Health and Finance Ministers task force.
Notes for editors
Brazil proposes the establishment a Global Coalition for Regional Production, Innovation and Equitable Access Alliance for Regional Production and Innovation. It is bringing together a network of key actors, including countries, academia, private sector, and international organizations, for research and development and production of vaccines, medicines, diagnostics, and strategic supplies to combat diseases with strong social determinants and that mainly affect vulnerable populations. For more information on the G20 Health Working Group, see the G20 website: https://www.g20.org/en/tracks/sherpa-track/health
About the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics
The Council was established by UNAIDS in 2023 and is comprised of experts from academia, government, civil society and international development actors committed to implementing evidence-based solutions to address inequalities fuelling AIDS and other pandemics. It is chaired by Nobel Laureate Professor Joseph Stiglitz, Former First Lady of Namibia Monica Geingos, and Professor Sir Michael Marmot who chaired the Commission on Social Determinants of Health. Learn more at inequalitycouncil.org.
UNAIDS
The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
Contact
Ben PhillipsUNAIDS Communications Director
phillipsb@unaids.org
UNAIDS Brazil Advocacy and Communication Officer
Thainá Kedzierski
KedzierskiTH@unaids.org