NEPWHAN Marks World AIDS Day 2025 With National Press Conference, Reaffirms Commitment to Ending AIDS by 2030
The press conference highlighted NEPWHAN’s continued leadership in advancing community-led interventions, strengthening accountability, and ensuring that the voices of people living with HIV remain central to Nigeria’s AIDS response. NEPWHAN emphasized that despite progress in expanding access to treatment and prevention, persistent challenges such as stigma, discrimination, human rights violations, treatment disruptions, and widening inequalities still hinder national progress.
Addressing the media, NEPWHAN leadership reaffirmed the network’s commitment to ensuring that all people living with HIV—especially women, young people, key populations, and persons with disabilities—receive equitable, non-discriminatory, and client-centered services. The organization also called for renewed government ownership of HIV programmes, improved domestic financing, and stronger political commitment at federal and state levels.
The press conference provided a platform to share evidence from the Community-Led Monitoring (CLM) programme, showing real-time gaps in service delivery, commodity security, viral load access, and community engagement. NEPWHAN urged policymakers to integrate CLM findings into national planning and decision-making.
Stakeholders, including NACA, the Federal Ministry of Health, UNAIDS, and CSOs, commended NEPWHAN for its consistent advocacy and community-driven leadership. They echoed the call for sustained investments to achieve epidemic control and safeguard the gains made over the years.
NEPWHAN reaffirmed that ending AIDS is achievable—but only through genuine partnership, accountability, and full recognition of community leadership. The network remains committed to championing the rights, dignity, and wellbeing of all people living with HIV across Nigeria.





