USAID Supports 625,000 AIDS Orphans, Vulnerable Children,Caregivers in five years

Abuja – The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) had a ceremony on Wednesday to conclude a five-year activity that provided support for 500,000 children orphaned or made vulnerable by the AIDS epidemic, and 125,000 of their caregivers.
Since 2013, the $45.3 million Sustainable Mechanisms for Improving Livelihoods (SMILE) activity, funded by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), has scaled up support services for orphans and vulnerable children (in 47 local government areas across five states (Benue, Edo, Kogi, and Nassawara) and the Federal Capital Territory.
Presiding at the ceremony was a representative of Mrs. Ifeoma Anagbogu, Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry for Women Affairs and Social Development, joined by Dr. Zohra Balsara, Director of the USAID Office of HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis Control, along with a host of state commissioners of Women Affairs and Social Development.
“Support to these vulnerable populations is critical for the future of Nigeria, a country whose human capital is its greatest strength,” said Dr. Balsara.    
To achieve these results, SMILE provided grants to civil society organizations under a consortium led by Catholic Relief Services.  SMILE helped establish referral networks, improve HIV/AIDS related service delivery, and support to households affected by the epidemic.  The activity worked through schools on health education and school access, provided psychosocial support to AIDS victims, and trained their caregivers on parenting skills.
Sonia Gambo, a beneficiary from Bwari Area Council in the FCT, said she thought her life was over after her initial diagnosis.  “I was dead,” she dramatically told ceremony participants before recounting how the SMILE project and their workers counselled her on how to cope with challenges of life and living.
She also said that SMILE gave her seed money and helped her secure a loan with which she started a firewood and charcoal business as she also coached on how to be a better wife and mother despite her illness.
  “SMILE taught me how to live positively with HIV.”  she concluded
USAID leads international development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance and help people progress beyond assistance through social services, supports transparent and accountable governance, promotes a more market-led economy, and enhances Nigeria’s capacity as a responsible regional and trade partner.
Oru Leonard

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