US to end health aid to Zimbabwe after funding talks collapse
The US will end $367 million in health aid after Zimbabwe halted talks over sovereignty and data access concerns, affecting 1.2 million people on HIV treatment.
- On Tuesday, the US Embassy in Harare confirmed Zimbabwe's government pulled out of negotiations over a $367 million health deal after President Emmerson Mnangagwa ordered talks halted on December 23.
- Douglas Mombeshora, Health Minister, and Mthuli Ncube, Finance Minister, had greenlit engagement before Emmerson Mnangagwa, President, ordered talks stopped citing sovereignty concerns.
- Tremont warned Zimbabwe would miss benefits, saying the MoU was to aid 1.2 million receiving HIV treatment, and highlighted Zimbabwe's assurance to sustain HIV efforts, calling the decision regrettable.
- The US embassy said it will wind down US health assistance in Zimbabwe, describing the decision as regrettable and citing the MoU aimed to build capacity and ensure sustainability.
- The US has rolled out one-on-one health pacts across Africa under its `America First` plan, donating over $3.5 billion to Zimbabwe and spending $20 billion in 16 countries amid Kenya's pact legal challenge.
41 Articles
41 Articles
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Zimbabwe has withdrawn from negotiations on a US$350 million health agreement, citing sovereignty concerns, while the US prepares to scale back its assistance, raising questions about future health programmes in the country.
U.S. to end health aid to Zimbabwe after funding talks collapse
The U.S. will wind down health assistance to Zimbabwe after the African country withdrew from talks on a proposed $367 million bilateral funding deal. The U.S said the deal would have supported HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, maternal health and outbreak preparedness,…
US to wind down health aid to Zimbabwe after funding talks collapse over data sharing dispute
The US Embassy in Zimbabwe said Washington had offered $367 million over five years to support priority health programmes. Zimbabwean authorities said they rejected the proposal over concerns about data sharing, fairness and sovereignty.
Zimbabwe walks away from $367M US health deal over sovereignty concerns
Zimbabwe has pulled out of talks with the United States over a new health aid deal meant to replace a program dismantled under President Donald Trump. The agreement would have provided $367 million over five years, supporting 1.2 million Zimbabweans receiving HIV treatment.
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