Members of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on HIV and AIDS from the United Kingdom, along with the Director of Stop AIDS, visited UNAIDS Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, to strengthen collaboration.
Since the mid-1980s, APPG has brought United Kingdom parliamentarians together from across the political divide to fight for the rights of people living with HIV.
“I think all politicians are driven by wanting to make a difference,” said David Mundell, Member of Parliament, who is Co-Chair of APPG. “This is an established all-party group that has been effective, with a voice in parliament and that also acts globally.”
Mr Mundell said that APPG is focused on maintaining momentum on HIV in the face of several challenges. Not only did some people in the United Kingdom mistakenly imagine that HIV was already sorted, he said, he also alluded to the challenges in keeping attention on HIV given the war in Ukraine and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
“We have to be advocates for change in terms of keeping HIV high on the agenda and resources available,” he said. For example, he believes that funds for Ukraine should be additional and not come from the international development envelope and will argue that case to the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary.
In his words, it’s all about putting the best case forward. “There is a competition for attention, therefore we need to put issues into context,” Mr Mundell said. He mentioned UNAIDS and its Cosponsors’ Education Plus initiative as a great way to empower young women while also tackling HIV. “Demonstrating the interconnectedness of such issues will allow us to sustain our arguments.” Every week, more than 4200 young women become infected with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa but keeping girls in secondary school reduces that risk by up to 50%.
Reflecting on the United Kingdom’s decision to cut its level of official development assistance from 0.7% to 0.5% of gross domestic product and reduce funding for the AIDS response, Mr Mundell explained that there have been many ongoing changes in the United Kingdom, but he is confident in making the case that investment in the AIDS response is good value. “It is quite clear that United Kingdom funding will be more outcome-based, with a need to show direct results based on investment. APPG intends to maintain United Kingdom leadership in the AIDS response, working with community groups on the ground with the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, as well as UNAIDS.”
UNAIDS and APPG reiterated their strong commitment to having a fully replenished Global Fund. Twenty years after the founding of the Global Fund, the target for the seventh replenishment is to raise US$ 18 billion to save 20 million lives. According to estimates, this represents 14% of the total of US$ 130.2 billion needed for the period 2024–2026.
Inter-Parliamentary Union Secretary-General Martin Chungong and UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima hosted a joint round table for APPG to discuss the crucial role of legislators worldwide in taking the bold actions needed to end AIDS.
“We parliamentarians from the United Kingdom cannot tell people in other countries how to run their country, that is not what we want to do,” said Mr Mundell, noting that instead the group worked to share experiences and build partnerships. He cited how criminalization has been linked to higher numbers of HIV infections, which can often lead to much more difficult, long-term consequences. “By highlighting certain practices and steps we want to show that certain changes can have a positive effect without undermining cultural values,” he said.
Mr Mundell noted that during the Commonwealth discussions in mid-March, he urged all nations to have full and frank discussions on progress in advancing the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people and progress in ending AIDS, saying that a huge amount had been achieved but that there was still a lot to do.
Suki Beavers, UNAIDS Director, Gender Equality, Human Rights and Community Engagement, commended APPG’s inclusive approach. She also stressed that the role of parliamentarians is key.
“Parliamentarians can open up the space to discussions and make diverse voices heard in the national policy process, especially the voices of people who are often excluded from decision-making on the issues that affect them most,” she said. Ms Beavers also said that strengthening peer-to-peer relations (parliamentarian to parliamentarian) can also drive progressive law reform.
Mr Chungong shared how parliamentarians from across the world are stepping up their work with UNAIDS to address the inequalities that hold back progress on ending AIDS.
In Ms Beavers’ closing remarks, she reiterated to the group the fact that the HIV response was at a critical point. “We need to move to a more targeted and systemic approach as laid out in the new Global AIDS Strategy 2021–2026, including fully funded and supported community-led responses,” she said.
“It is really clear that we need major leverage to influence and to create more and more diverse partnerships so that we can achieve the goal of ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.”