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Global Fund grant threatened

Anxiety is mounting in Nigeria’s HIV/AIDS community amid reports that the Global Fund secretariat has recommended to its board not to extend funding of Nigeria's grant into phase II. Nigeria’s Treatment Action Movement (TAM) described the development as a "big shame" for the country where "the need for HIV treatment scale up is so acute". The Chairman of the National Action Committee on AIDS (NACA) Professor Babatunde Osotimehin said the country was awaiting the formal decision by the board when it meets in two weeks time. "The Global Fund raised some issues on the slowness of the implementation of our programmes and our planning and we have responded to those issues. We are not aware of any decision yet," Osotimehin stated. TAM activists led by Rolake Odetoyinbo declared a vote of no-confidence in the Country's Coordinating Mechanism (CCM), which it accused of not performing its oversight function of NACA - the principal recipient of Global Fund money. They urged President Olusegun Obasanjo to take immediate action to salvage the possible cancellation of the grant by restructuring the CCM and NACA. "We cannot afford to loose this important grant due to the inefficiency of the members of the CCM, many of whom do not have the mandate of the groups they are supposed to be representing," Odetoyinbo alleged Nigeria’s first round grant was awarded in 2003. Under Global Fund rules, a decision to fund the last three years of the five-year grant are conditional on meeting key performance targets. Funding for the first two years totaled US $26.4 million to cover Nigeria’s national antiretroviral treatment scheme, and the expansion of its mother-to-child transmission programme. As of October, only US $6 million had been spent. The full five-year grant covering both programmes is worth US $107 million.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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