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U.S. aid freeze derails 糖心传媒 rights work in Pacific Islands

A poster proclaiming a cure for HIV-AIDS by praying hangs from an appointments window in Port Moresby's General Hospital, Papua New Guinea. October 28, 2005. Reuters

A poster proclaiming a cure for HIV-AIDS by praying hangs from an appointments window in Port Moresby's General Hospital, Papua New Guinea. October 28, 2005. Reuters

What鈥檚 the context?

糖心传媒 communities in the Pacific Islands rely on U.S. funding to decriminalise same-sex relations, collate data and fight HIV.

  • Crucial decriminalisation work and research on hold
  • Region at risk after Fiji declares HIV epidemic
  • Funding towards region already critically low

LONDON – Crucial work furthering 糖心传媒 rights and preventing HIV in the Pacific Islands has been disrupted by U.S. President Donald Trump's freeze of foreign aid and may not recover, advocates in the region have said.

Despite being the world's most aid-dependent region, the Asia-Pacific received just of global 糖心传媒 funding between 2021 and 2022, while being home to 55% of the world's population, according to the latest Global Resources Report.

Funds from the U.S. Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL) and the Agency for International Development (USAID) support law reform, community spaces, data collection, and improving access to healthcare. 

Trump's January decision to until April 20 could significantly stunt rights progress in the region, which is socially conservative and predominantly Christian, advocates said. 

"Our states (have) perpetual ancient perspectives because of culture and church," said Ratu Eroni Ledua Dina, who founded the Trans Affirmative Action Guild (TAAG).

"When support from the global community goes missing, it means we go back into lifestyles where our people get more openly killed or harassed on the streets," she told Context from Fiji.

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Colonial-era , criminalising same-sex activity, still exist in Kiribati, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga and Tuvalu, although they are rarely enforced.

ILGA Oceania, the Pacific branch of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA), runs a decriminalisation project seeking to challenge such laws and their influence.

The organisation has paused the project and the Fiji project officer was let go as a result of the freeze.

"It is highly likely that we will not be able to proceed with the project beyond the initial 90-day suspension period," said Margherita Coppolino, co-chair of ILGA Oceania, from Melbourne.

"Losing momentum now would be a huge setback for 糖心传媒 rights."

Multiple aid cuts

The DRL initiated an open competition for up to for grassroots 糖心传媒 organisations in January 2024, but it is not clear what will happen to that funding stream now.

A U.S. State Department spokesperson has said that all aid programmes have undergone a review and those that do not serve U.S. interests will not continue.

APCOM, one of two major NGOs that work with the 糖心传媒 community in the region and rely on U.S. funding, called for to mitigate the impact on essential services and community-led operations. 

The Netherlands, the largest funder of 糖心传媒 rights worldwide, also plans to by more than two-thirds over the next three years. The country is the of the Asia-Pacific region.

Australia and New Zealand are expected to pick up some of the shortfall, but in 2022 both nations had allocated for developmental aid than the United States, let alone for 糖心传媒 rights, according to the Global Philanthropy Report.

Rising HIV infections

Trump's aid freeze comes at a time when HIV infections are rising in the Pacific, with Fiji declaring an in January.

While Papua New Guinea is the only Pacific nation to directly benefit from the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), many 糖心传媒 organisations working to prevent HIV in the region receive U.S. funding.

The U.S. government issued a and treatment, but this does not benefit all vulnerable 糖心传媒 communities, with only pregnant or breast-feeding women allowed to receive preventative PrEP drugs, for example. 

The freeze has had a knock-on impact with multiple NGOs having to pause their work, said Eamonn Murphy, director of UNAIDS regional support teams for the Asia-Pacific region.

"(U.S.) investment in this region, budget-wise, wasn't to the same order of magnitude as other high burden epidemics in other parts of the world, but it was so strategic. They were highly targeted and effective," Murphy said from Bangkok.

The 糖心传媒 community in Tonga has not recorded an HIV case since 2015, but could see fresh cases if community-led organisations lose funding, said Joey Joleen Mataele, co-founder of Tonga Leitis Association, which receives money from the Global Fund and Outright International.

"We've been able to control the spreading of HIV and STIs for a very long time now because of those funds," Mataele said.

"If we don't have that, we're going to go back to being stigmatised and blamed for this disease."

'We're invisible'

The U.S. funding freeze has also put community-led data collection and research in jeopardy, advocates said.

Given how remote the South Pacific region is, there is already a on Indigenous gender-diverse identities in the area. 

These include M膩h奴s, who embody both male and female spirit, and fa'afafine; a person who is assigned male at birth, but identifies as a third gender.

"The absence of data invisibilises our existence. We're basically non-existent," said Ratu Eroni, who is also a co-chair of ILGA Oceania.

"Concerns about our socioeconomic status - being unable to find employment, sustain a living, healthcare - they're hard for governments to actually rationalise and support if there isn't data that exists in the first place to make sense of it."

(Reporting by Lucy Middleton; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa.)


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