Aliyu: My Plan is to Fix, Rejuvenate UNAIDS if Appointed

Aliyu: My Plan is to Fix, Rejuvenate UNAIDS if Appointed

Dr. Aliyu Sani is the immediate past Director General of NACA. He is currently aspiring for the position of Executive Director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). In this interview with select journalists, he said his wealth of experience in the HIV world makes him most prepared to lead the UN body. He also spoke on his strides in NACA and what must be done to eradicate the public health challenge globally. Martins Ifijeh brings excerpts

 

 

 

How would you describe yourself?

I graduated from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria just over 25 years ago. I can recall quite vividly my fascination with HIV even in those early days. My community medicine project prior to graduation was on “Knowledge, attitude and belief on HIV/AIDS among university students in a Northern Nigerian institution.” This dissertation was a real eye opener to the challenges of covert sexual relationships among young people in highly conservative societies and the link to cultural norms. My findings showed that young people were having sex, and potentially at risk of acquiring HIV, even in communities where social mixing among the sexes was taboo.  The need for increased awareness of HIV knowledge and prevention was quite clear.

My first proper job as a medical doctor was at the State House Clinic in Abuja, which was the very first public health institution in the country to start providing free HIV treatment (Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy of HAART). Abuja was a new federal capital then, blossoming with the influx of people from all over the country. The issue of stigma and discrimination was so rife then that patients would only come to collect their medications in the late evenings to avoid being identified as living with HIV. I moved to the UK in 1998 to pursue a postgraduate programme in Internal Medicine. There, I was attracted once again to HIV medicine, after attaining dual membership of the Royal Colleges of Physician of the UK and Ireland.  I worked as a junior doctor at the Mortimer Market Centre, the largest NHS funded sexual health clinic in the UK, this time experiencing HIV medicine in a resource rich environment. The clientele was very different. While in Nigeria, the epidemic was primarily in heterosexuals, in the UK it was a key population driven epidemic. When I moved to Cambridge a couple of years later, my heart was still in HIV medicine. I was appointed to the first joint training post in microbiology and infectious diseases, an experiment that was not only successful but also led to a consultant post being created some years later, which I subsequently took up.

My microbiology background strengthened the scientific platform for my infection practice, bridging the gap between the laboratory and clinical interface and providing me with the leadership skills necessary to run a large field exercise like the Nigeria AIDS Indicator and Impact Survey (NAIIS).

In July 2016, I was approached by the new administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to assist with restructuring the country’s HIV response, which at the time was in deep crisis. To me, this was an opportunity to put back into a system that I had personally benefited from. I arranged for Special Leave with my institution and moved back to Nigeria to take up the post as the Director General of NACA. Prior to this, I had already agreed with government on a set of deliverables, which included a major restructuring of NACA to make it more efficient and effective.

You are aspiring for the post of Executive Director of UNAIDS. What specifically prepares and qualifies you for the job?

I have over two decades experience of working in the HIV/AIDS arena, both in resource rich and resource-poor environments; in clinical and laboratory settings; out in the field as well as in the civil society space. I have the essential scientific understanding, a deep personal commitment to fostering quality teamwork and partnership, and the demonstrated courage and political skills to drive change in the most difficult environments.  I believe these are the key qualities required for this post today.

I have made tremendous progress in redefining the HIV response in Nigeria, working with the different arms of government, partners, civil society and the private sector to chart a new path for the country’s response. I have worked hand-in-glove with my country’s president, as his personal appointee and with his absolute support, to tangibly move policy and bring a new dynamism to the AIDS response in my country and region. I have led and successfully delivered in record time NAIIS, the largest HIV survey of its kind in the world, to critical acclaim. I have significantly increased domestic resource allocation to the HIV response by both states and federal government as well as supported the establishment of a private sector led HIV Trust Fund. I have brought in-depth knowledge and intellectual capacity in the science and programmes for HIV prevention, treatment, service delivery and the challenges of reaching people living with HIV, women, adolescents and key populations. I am able to bring the science and politics of AIDS together for the benefit of the response.

The Nigeria HIV epidemic is a challenging and complex one, beset by accountability issues, barriers to accessing services, human rights abuses and social injustice. To succeed in such an environment requires resilience and strong negotiation skills.  I have successfully led the turnaround of the Nigeria HIV response, which over the years had defied progress. As stated by Prof Isaac Adewole, the immediate past Minister of Health in Nigeria, “I have the necessary mix of skills, experience, and temperament to hit the ground running, bringing people together and getting people to do the greatest things.”

I believe my work in transforming Nigeria’s National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), rebuilding credibility with our partners, bridging science and data to action, leading a collective national reappraisal and prioritization, and championing our cause at the highest political levels to move policy and mobilize resources, has transformed our AIDS response at a national level. Together with my broader curriculum, work history, and professional achievements, I believe I can leverage my experience to drive progress at the global level through UNAIDS. As a young, energetic and dynamic leader, I will bring new energy to the global HIV response. I have the grasp of the challenges, qualifications and directly relevant experience, not only to fill this position, but to hit the ground running, with passion.

What will UNAIDS look like under your leadership? What are the priority issues and directions that you intend to introduce at UNAIDS?

As an organisation, UNAIDS has been very successful in driving its mandate and maintaining the visibility of HIV globally as a public health threat.  Nevertheless, events of the last year have put a huge strain on the organisation and its stakeholders, creating the image of an organisation in deep crisis. UNAIDS finances have been under strain for a number of years, with the situation recently becoming more acute. In key technical areas, UNAIDS’ several “realignments” appear to have hollowed out its technical capacity. My priority will be to ‘right the ship’ starting by redeeming UNAIDS’ public image of rectitude, instilling a renewed sense of pride, and refocusing on the serious issues of preventing new infections and reducing mortality. I will lead by example, encouraging quality teamwork and partnership, adopting a zero-tolerance approach to harassment, promoting gender equality and strengthen collegiality and harmonious working relationship among staff.

Clearly, some hard choices will need to be made and a meaningful consultation of stakeholders is the sine qua non. Pressing a strategic reset with cosponsors would be key to building a new élan for the joint programme, building on the UN Secretary-General’s on-going bold reform especially at the country level and aligned with the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.  One of UNAIDS key strengths has been the unity and consensus of its Programme Coordinating Board, and whomever serves next as Executive Director will need to work hard to preserve this approach.

I am determined to fully implement the management action plan arising from the events of the past year. I will also work jointly with the PCB members to make meetings more strategic and relevant to programmatic needs. I will promote inclusive governance and a country level approach to the joint programme based on agreed and robust joint planning, working and reporting. I will make sure the voices of key stakeholders are heard while promoting a system wide mainstreaming of HIV as part of the wider Universal Health Care agenda. This will require the holistic needs of people living with HIV, key populations and vulnerable persons addressed within the SDG framework of poverty alleviation, gender/ human rights and economic empowerment. The approach to the use of data will be modified to include field data that goes beyond modelling and a stronger partnership developed with PEPFAR, Global Fund and other partners to share strategic information for action.

Within the context of the UN Secretary General’s reform agenda to building a new generation UN Country Team, I will work to refine the joint programme at country level tailored to country priorities through an inclusive partnership and joint accountability with government, civil society, communities and international partners. There is a strong need to reinvigorate efforts in regions such as Eastern Europe, Asia Pacific and the Middle East where we are seeing numerous countries with increasing infections. At the same time, the lagging response in West and Central Africa is of major concern and I will work to generate greater commitment. We cannot afford to leave anybody behind. I will galvanize the political will and work with partners to mobilise the necessary resources to ensure we get back on track for 2030.

The issue of HIV prevention particularly among young persons, women and key populations becomes ever more urgent. We need a community health system which compliments and actively works with civil society who are organised to advocate and provide guidance and oversight to the programme. I will strengthen this partnership and ensure that prevention programmes are adequately resourced and pushed to the forefront of the HIV response, while also addressing human rights, stigma and social justice issues.  We have not invested to scale for eliminating stigma and discrimination. This has to change. The next Executive Director will need to fix, rejuvenate and revitalize UNAIDS. I am willing and able to do so.

The post of UNAIDS ED was occupied by an African until a few months ago, why will another African qualify for the international position?

While touching every continent, the epicenter of the HIV epidemic remains in Africa. Although tremendous success has been achieved in placing persons living with HIV on treatment with significant reduction in AIDS related deaths, the number of new HIV infections is not falling fast enough in Africa. At the same time, Africa’s population growth and youth bulge are like no other. In West and Central Africa (WCA) for instance, the HIV epidemic continues to grow amid significant unmet treatment need. WCA accounts for a third of the 9.4 million undiagnosed persons living with HIV and nearly a quarter of the 19.4 million not virologically suppressed. Only 48 per cent of persons living with HIV in the region know their status. PMTCT transmission rates in WCA is 20.2 per cent.

Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) is home to more than half of the 37 million persons living with HIV globally. North Africa has one of the widest gaps in treatment and viral load suppression. There has been a progressive shift in political and capital commitment to HIV programmes in the last few years. This is particularly felt in African countries where sustainability is a major challenge and the bulk of HIV investment is from external donors. In Mozambique for instance, 17 per cent of the total public health domestic budget goes to HIV. In the event that international donor support is cut by 20 per cent, the country will have to accommodate HIV with 98 per cent of their public health budget, which is clearly not sustainable. Other African countries are facing similar scenarios, including my own country Nigeria.

An epidemic of this proportion requires a strong leader with the local experience of the terrain and the political sagacity to get things done. It requires a leader with local connections and the understanding of cultural norms and sensitivities that go with effective and impactful advocacy. The new Executive Director will need to work in a dynamic and engaged way, not just at country level but also at the regional level. An African with sensitivity to the cultural and economic challenges is critical to advancing policies and investments required to accelerate and sustain the response.

You recently resigned from your post at NACA. Why? What is your current job?

I was appointed to the post of Director General of NACA by the President in July 2016. I am grateful to President Muhammadu Buhari for giving me the opportunity. Indeed, there is no greater honor than to serve one’s country.

At the time, I was working at Cambridge University Hospitals (CUH) as a senior hospital consultant for almost a decade. The government of Nigeria appointed me to this post with the understanding that I will restructure the national HIV response and get it back on track. I had identified and agreed a set of key priorities that I wanted to implement while in Nigeria. For this I set out to achieve these deliverables within the first tenure of the Buhari’s administration.

I have been fortunate enough to deliver on almost all the priorities I set out to achieve during this period. I stepped down from the DG NACA post at the end of June 2019 following a structured handover process to ensure continuity of the programme

 

Did your job at NACA actually prepare you for UNAIDS ED post?

Definitely. NACA is in many ways a microcosm of UNAIDS. The agency was modelled after UNAIDS with a similar mandate for coordination, facilitating and mobilising resources for the HIV response, promoting a data-driven strategic response, measuring impact and ensuring that key stakeholders are coordinated and accountable for delivering agreed priorities.

Nigeria has a complex HIV epidemic with more that 1.9 million persons infected with HIV and about 1.1 million on treatment. As a large country with a population of almost 200 million and a federal system with health on the concurrent list, advocating for increased investment in HIV among 37 state governors was not an easy task. There were also serious challenges with stigma and discrimination and a legal environment that was hostile to key populations. Internally, I faced a culture of high handedness, maltreatment and bullying of staff that I had to put a stop to.

I have led Nigeria to successfully conduct, in record time, the largest HIV population-based survey ever undertaken globally, the Nigeria AIDS Indicator and Impact Survey (NAIIS), which became a game-changer for the national response. At one point during the survey I had more than 6000 staff in the field. NACA itself has a staff strength of about 300. I have a firm grounding in resource mobilization, having successfully advocated for a significant increase in domestic investment for HIV in Nigeria.

The DG NACA post also provided me with the platform to engage at a high level with government, donors and implementing partners. I represented the President of Nigeria at two UN General Assembly events, and I have chaired the Abidjan-Lagos Corridor Organisation, a sub-regional body formed by five West African countries to deal with HIV and other health issues along a major west African highway. I have restored donor confidence in Nigeria and engendered a spirit of collaboration and shared vision and responsibility for the response. I have developed a sound working knowledge of the UN system and have maintained an excellent working relationship, building on individual agencies’ comparative advantage, and connecting UN partners in the right political space to move the UN agenda.  I believe I have served the Nigeria HIV response very well in a very short spate of time. I am ready to apply these skills and experience on a bigger scale for the benefit of our global HIV community.

My job at NACA may not have necessarily prepared me for being among the younger candidates shortlisted for the post, but there can be no ending of AIDS as a public health threat if we fail our youth. I believe I can serve as a particularly good bridge for communicating and reaching out to this pivotal population group for the response.

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