A massive health lifeline just got pulled off the table after Zimbabwe walked away from a five-year US-backed funding deal worth $367 million.
US reacts to MOU withdrawal
US reacts to MOU withdrawal
- The United States of America labeled Zimbabwe’s exit from the proposed agreement regrettable.
- The deal would have spanned five years and totaled $367 million.
- U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe Pamela Tremont confirmed assistance will be wound down.
- Tremont described the package as the largest potential health pledge by any international funder.
- The United States of America had planned support for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria efforts.
- Maternal and child health initiatives were part of the arrangement.
- Disease outbreak preparedness also sat within the funding scope.
- About 1.2 million people receive HIV treatment through U.S.-supported programs.
- The United States of America structured the MOU around shared financing.
- Zimbabwe was expected to ramp up domestic health spending over time.
- Since 2006, Washington has provided over $1.9 billion in health aid.
- That support helped Zimbabwe reach UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets.
- The United States of America has signed similar MOUs with 16 African countries.
- Those agreements represent more than $18.3 billion in combined health commitments.
- Over $11.2 billion comes from U.S. assistance within that total.
- Recipient nations contribute about $7.1 billion in co-investment.