PAP President Roger Nkodo Dang |
A two-day high-level Pan
African Summit on
HIV/AIDS and health financing in Africa will take place from 11 to 12 July 2019
in Brazzaville, Congo.
The event will take place
under the high patronage of H.E. Denis
Sassou NGUESSO, President of the Republic of Congo, the Pan-African
Parliament (PAP) in collaboration with the Republic of Congo and the United
Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
According to a press release by Mr. Jeffrey
ONGANGA, Media Officer at the Pan African Parliament
in Midrand, South Africa, “the
Summit aims to engage African Union member states, international donors and
bilateral partners on the need to mobilize domestic resources, maintain and
sustain investments for the AIDS response in Africa, in a bid to meet Fast
Track targets and to eradicate AIDS.”
“The Rt. Hon. Roger Nkodo DANG, President of the PAP
stresses the importance of parliamentarians in leading advocacy efforts to
ensure the availability of adequate
funding at national level to finance HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programmes, saying more high-level engagements
would certainly spur stronger political will, global solidarity and shared
responsibility to build momentum and deliver on the goal of ending AIDS by
2030.”
“We
are faced with an urgency to find durable sources of finance to combat AIDS and
improve essential public health in Africa. Brazzaville shall deliver a firm
commitment to scale up national investments in light of the substantial
reduction of funding. I therefore look forward to the transformative consultations
that our Legislators shall hold with continental and global partners at this
high-level summit in Congo,” says Hon. Nkodo DANG.
The Rt.Hon. Roger Nkodo DANG also
reiterates the significant role of parliamentarians in holding governments
accountable for mobilizing resources in support of the forthcoming Global Fund
Replenishment in October.
Among
the specific issues on the agenda, are the unpacking of the role of
parliamentarians in realizing the right to health and achieving health targets
in Africa; sustainable financing, leadership and accountability; level advocacy
and call for action and support for the upcoming Global Fund replenishment.
It
is expected that the summit will be graced by a number of heads of state and
government including H.E. Kgalema Petrus MOTLANTHE, former President of
the Republic of South Africa and Champion for an AIDS free generation in
Africa.
“The impressive
mobilization of resources for financing global health in general and
particularly the HIV and AIDS response in both domestic and international
funding has been unprecedented in the history of public health. Significant
progress has been made towards the African Union Catalytic Framework to End
AIDS, TB and Eliminate Malaria by 2030 and Goal 3 of the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).”
“Despite the commendable
efforts to increase domestic funding, the resources allocated to health are
still insufficient given the required investment needs. In 2001, the Heads of
State of the African Union committed, through the Abuja Declaration, to
allocating at least 15 percent of national budgets to health care in order to
achieve universal coverage.”
“Africa undoubtedly has many development
priorities, including infrastructure, education, energy and security, to name
but a few. However, investment in health is not in line with economic progress
and international public funding commitments or standards. It is essential to
mobilize more investment in order to accelerate momentum toward achieving the
SDGs.”
“African countries can mobilize additional funds
by placing more emphasis on health when determining sectoral budgets,
optimizing tax collection, broadening their tax bases or increasing taxes on
unhealthy products such as tobacco and alcohol. Each country can adopt the
option it considers most appropriate to its socioeconomic and political context
in order to increase the resources allocated to health.”
“Current
levels of funding would only maintain the status quo, would not allow us to
achieve the Africa Health Strategy 2030 targets and would result in increased
numbers of new infections and deaths. In this scenario, the HIV epidemic would
outrun the response, increasing the long-term need for treatment and thereby
dramatically increasing future costs. Current gains would be reversed,
rendering HIV a perpetual epidemic which would damage human capital development
and thereby weaken economic growth.”
The High-Level Summit will therefore provide a “historic
platform and opportunity for parliamentarians across the African continent,
Heads of States, governments, foundations, civil society and the private sector
to discuss policies and concrete actions for mobilizing more domestic
investments for HIV and health and to support the upcoming Global Fund
replenishment in October this year.”
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