The Trump administration's order to stop all foreign aid has immediately affected people with HIV/AIDS. Clinics around the world rely on U.S. funds to provide treatments to those battling the disease.
Trump’s order threatens other programs such as the Pacific American Fund, a five-year, US$35 million aid project launched in 2020, and a US$50 million Pacific Islands Microfinance Partnership ...
Nineteen Republican attorneys general have decided that now is the perfect time to declare war on Costco to convince the bulk ...
The lawsuit states that Trump administration officials created an email address, hr-at-opm-.gov, and directed federal ...
More than 1.4 million Kenyans living with HIV face an uncertain future after the United States suspended billions in critical healthcare funding, part of a sweeping review of foreign aid ordered by ...
Retired President Uhuru Kenyatta urged Kenya and other African nations to end their over-reliance on foreign aid to finance ...
The Trump administration in the U.S. on Tuesday moved to halt the supply of lifesaving drugs for HIV, malaria, and ...
The CS admitted that the executive order by President Donald Trump has a huge impact on health financing and is seeking ...
PEPFAR’s computer systems also are being taken offline, a sign that the program may not return, as Republican critics had hoped. By Apoorva Mandavilli The Trump administration has instructed ...
Donald Trump’s order to freeze most foreign aid funding will have a devastating effect on the President’s Emergency Program for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, which helps fight HIV and AIDS internationally ...
Still, PEPFAR’s future remains in jeopardy, with potential consequences for more than 20 million people — including 500,000 children — who could lose access to lifesaving medications.
“It’s bad, bad,” said one State Department official who works on the HIV program, which is called the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR. The official, who, like ...