The Country Director,

WHO,

Nigeria.

LEAVING NO NIGERIAN BEHIND (LeNNiB) CAMPAIGN: WHO PLAN ON PrEP ACCESS FOR PERSONS AT SUBSTANTIAL RISK FOR HIV IN NIGERIA

The New HIV Vaccine and Microbicides Advocacy Society and its partners recently launched a campaign focused on ensuring no Nigerian is left behind in the HIV response through its Leaving No Nigerian Behind (LeNNiB) campaign.

For this campaign, we would like to see that communities at substantial risk for HIV infection in Nigeria have access to comprehensive HIV prevention tools to help reduce the risk for HIV infection. This include continued access to quarterly HIV testing, access to risk reduction counseling, prompt diagnosis and treatment of STIs, uninterrupted access to condoms and lubricants and immediate access to antiretroviral therapy including PrEP access.

Through this campaign, we also like to hold our government, international partners and all other stakeholders   working in the field of HIV response in Nigeria accountable to the populations and community they serve, deliver on their plans for Nigeria and meaningfully engage Nigerians towards meeting the 2020 and 2030 target to end the HIV epidemic globally.

We want to believe your organization works in an ethical manner. This should imply that the population and people you work with are not means to an end but end in themselves. If this is an ethical ethos of your work, we would expect WHO Nigeria to raise its voice and work towards facilitating access of persons at substantial risks for HIV to PrEP – a proven HIV intervention that reduces the risk to HIV infection.

As a group of community advocates we DEMAND  to know WHO Plans and ongoing work on PrEP for persons at substantial risk for HIV infection in Nigeria. We also DEMAND  that over the next four years:

  • WHO Nigeria demonstrates its commitment to the life and welfare of persons at substantial risk of HIV infection in Nigeria.
  • WHO speak up on the need for PrEP access for persons at substantial risks in Nigeria and facilitate policy guideline for delivery of PrEP for persons at substantial risks in Nigeria.
  • WHO be accountable to its mandates in Nigeria in respect to HIV treatment and prevention for persons at substantial risk for HIV infections, and also make public its annual reports on how well it is meeting the Nigeria mandate.

NHVMAS and her partners duly recognize WHO’s leadership and the significant roles played in the Nigeria HIV response for Nigeria at large and persons at substantial risk of  HIV infection specifically. We do not doubt the sincerity in your efforts to see Nigeria is not left behind. However, we as community actors DEMAND that you do more so that no Nigerian is left behind in race for zero new HIV infections by 2030.