The New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society, in collaboration with Safehaven and her partners on the Gender Forum, jointly celebrate the International Women’s Day. We celebrate the success recorded all around the world with respect to gender responses. We also recognize the efforts made by the Nigerian government towards ensuring gender equality in all aspects of national policy formulation and programming. We continue to ask our government to be accountable to its promise and to work towards ending the various forms of violence against women and female sex workers in line with the UN theme for the 2013: A promise is a promise: Time for action to end violence against women and girls.

As the global and national HIV epidemiological data show us, the HIV epidemic continues to affect women disproportionately. This disproportionate impact affects the physical, social, economic, spiritual and psychological wellbeing of women. We therefore need to see more being done to understand and address the many factors that puts women at a disadvantage in Nigeria. We acknowledge the ongoing efforts of the National Agency for the Control of AIDS to commission operation researches one of which explores fundamentals of the gender dynamics in HIV epidemiology in Nigeria. We recognize this as a positive development. We however also recognize that there is still more to be done.

As a collective body, we call for more research and implementation science to address the impact of poor access to formal education by girls on their disproportionate risk for HIV. Evidences from our national surveys show clearly that young girls with low or no formal education are disproportionately affected by HIV. We need more concrete efforts by our national and state government to ensure young girls have access to formal education and are retained in school.

We know also that the biology of the woman increases her risk for HIV infection. Yet, there is currently little effort in the country to address the need for development of tools to enhance the ability of women to protect herself from HIV infection. We are aware of the ongoing FACTS 001 microbicide trials in South Africa. While Nigeria may not be able to host such trials, we are yet to see evidence of Nigeria being prepared to translate the outcome of those sciences into action. We therefore call on our national government and the National Agency for the Control of AIDS to start putting in place post trial access plans for microbicides and all other potential HIV prevention tools that will enhance the ability of women to protect themselves.

We also are starting to learn about the potential of DMPA – an hormonal contraceptive very popular with women in Nigeria – to increase their risk for HIV infection. The evolving evidence in the field are pointing clearing to the probability of a two-fold increased risk for HIV infection for HIV negative women who are using DMPA. We need to see our government respond to this evolving scientific evidence and find ways of ensuring women are empowered with this information so as to enable them make informed choices about contraceptive use.

We demand that the Nigerian government be more alive to its national and global responsibility to the Nigerian woman so as to ensure an AIDS free generation which is practically impossible when the ability of women to prevent themselves from getting infected with HIV is not addressed. Collectively, we ask for prompt action by the national government led by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS to develop an action plan that will address the identified gaps enumerated above. We ask for increased investment in implementation science that will enable the country develop evidence based responses that can address the factors that increase the risk of young girls and women to HIV infection.