US aid freeze puts HIV-positive orphans in Kenya at risk as medical
supplies dwindle
Send a link to a friend
[February 21, 2025]
By NICHOLAS KOMU
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Two-year-old Evans was brought to the Nyumbani
Children’s Home in Nairobi, Kenya a year ago, suffering from HIV and
tuberculosis. With no family to care for him, Evans was referred to the
orphanage by a health center after he stopped responding to medical
treatment.
Nyumbani Children’s Home is the reason Evans is still alive. But
political decisions made thousands of miles (kilometers) away might
spell the end of his short life. Nyumbani provides him and around 100
other children with antiretroviral medication, which they have been
receiving from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
through the Kenyan government.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent executive order to freeze USAID’s
funding means Nyumbani’s access to life-saving antiretroviral drugs,
which stop the HIV virus from replicating in the body, may end soon.
Trump’s order seeks to review almost all U.S. foreign aid for 90 days
and his administration has moved to shut down USAID. The effects are
beginning to set it in, with thousands of people losing their jobs
globally and humanitarian programs around the world disrupted.
For children at Nyumbani Children's Home, it's a life and death
situation.
As he plays with other preschoolers, Evans is oblivious to his uncertain
future, despite the worry on his caregivers’ faces.

The tiny graves at one end of the orphanage compound are a bleak
reminder of what a future without USAID looks like for the children.
It's a scenario Sister Tresa Palakudy — who has been looking after
children here for 28 years — is well familiar with having worked at the
orphanage before USAID started helping.
“When we started caring for them, they didn’t look like they had life in
them,” she said. “One after another, they died. It was so painful, and I
don’t want to see that happen again."
When Nyumbani, which means “Home” in Swahili, was started in 1992 by
Christian missionaries, antiretroviral medication had not been
introduced. Back then, it operated as a rescue center for orphaned and
abandoned children living with HIV, offering largely palliative care.
The 2003 inception of the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief, or PEPFAR, provided new hope for children living with HIV around
the continent, including the orphans at Nyumbani. PEPFAR’s humanitarian
aid to combat HIV in Kenya was funded largely by USAID.
“USAID started bringing ARVs free of charge,” said Palakudy. “We put all
our children on ARVs and their lives changed. They became healthy and
were able to go to school and live like other children.”
Over the last two decades, the U.S government, through PEPFAR, has spent
more than $8 billion on HIV/AIDS treatment for close to 1.3 million
people in Kenya.
USAID and PEPFAR have been critical to operating Nyumbani, having
donated more than $16 million to the home between 1999 and 2023. This
has enabled the home to reach up to 50,000 children through the rescue
center, as well as its two outreach programs Lea Toto and Nyumbani
Village. The aid included direct funds to the home, which was used to
run the two outreach programs.
Direct funding from USAID was discontinued in 2023, about the same time
the orphanage came under scrutiny over allegations of sexual abuse of
children by volunteers and staff members.
[to top of second column]
|

Children pick anti-retroviral drugs at the Nyumbani Children's Home
orphanage that is heavily reliant on foreign donations in Nairobi,
Kenya Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga)
 According to a Washington Post
report, six former residents claimed that administrators at the home
covered up allegations of sexual abuse. The home disputed the claims
of a cover up, insisting that all allegations were handled according
to protocols including reporting to local authorities and providing
counseling to affected residents.
Executive Director Judith Wamboye said investigations by the Kenyan
police were inconclusive. The discontinuation of the funds was not
related to the investigations and was in line with a change in USAID
policy to channel aid through the government rather than directly to
organizations.
The policy change affected all organizations receiving funding.
Rather than giving money directly to non-governmental organizations,
funding would be channeled through government programs that catered
to similar needs. As a result, Nyumbani scaled down its outreach
programs and referred beneficiaries to government institutions.
With the discontinuation of direct funding from USAID, the two
outreach programs under Nyumbani were scaled down and children in
the program were referred to other centers. However, Nyumbani has
still been reliant on USAID to supply the lifesaving PEPFAR HIV
treatment drugs for free.
“The future is uncertain,” said Wamboye. “The Kenyan government
announced that they only have ARV stocks to last six months.”
According to data from amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research,
about 1.3 million people are on HIV/AIDS treatment in Kenya, and
1,602 orphans and vulnerable children in Kenya are dependent on
PEPFAR. amfAR warns that President Trump’s freeze on foreign aid
could sever their access to critical medical care.
One such child is Mercy, who has been under the care of Nyumbani for
the last 12 years. The ARVs saved her life. “I had a very weak
immune system," she said. "This led me to contracting many serious
illnesses like tuberculosis and skin diseases.”
Mercy was placed on HIV treatment, giving her a lifeline, but recent
news on the freeze order has her scared for her life.
“I am very afraid that previous illnesses that I experienced when I
was young will reoccur. And now that I have finished high school and
am ready to join college, I am scared it will ruin everything,” she
said.
On average, the children's home requires $1,139 per child annually
for HIV treatment. In addition to antiretrovirals, the home needs
reagents to enable regular testing of the viral load in the
children, as well as medicines to treat opportunistic illnesses,
which are common among HIV patients.

Wamboye said that should PEPFAR be discontinued permanently, the
cost of ARVs could go up and become unaffordable, which will mean
children living with HIV will die.
“This is a life-saving situation and we cannot sit and wait and
bargain on human life. So for us, it’s about human life, the lives
that we need to save. Something needs to be done urgently,” she
said.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |