African CSOs convene to discuss the health funding gap ahead of the AU summit.  

Feb 5, 2026 - 10:05
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African CSOs convene to discuss the health funding gap ahead of the AU summit.  
The CSOs Webinar

The Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in the health sector have today convened a wedinar to discuss the existing health funding gap and devise measures to address it challenge Africa Union Leaders on "Health Sovereignty" as Donor Aid Plummets.  

According to CSOs Africa is facing a mathematical impossibility that threatens to dismantle decades of public health progress.

 As the continent’s leaders prepare to gather in Addis Ababa for the AU Heads of State Summit, a coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) is blowing the whistle on a looming fiscal cliff.

Over the past 4 years, Official Development Assistance (ODA) to Africa contracted by 70 percent—the largest decline in recent history.

“Simultaneously, the continent has seen a 41 percent surge in disease outbreaks. While the threats are multiplying, the cheque book is closing” partly reads a statement released on 4th Feb 2026.

The CSOs meeting on the 5th February 2026, in a high level webinar includes AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) Africa, in collaboration with Africa REACH, WACI Health, an Africa regional advocacy organization, and Resilience Action Network Africa (RANA), an independent African CSO advocacy network, to address the "$17 Question". Currently, total health spending across many African nations averages just $17 per person per year. The minimum required for essential services? $60.

"We cannot beg our way out of a $43 per person deficit," says Dr Penninah Iutung, the AHF Executive Vice President. Adding that "With donor priorities shifting and assistance declining, Africa must pivot from reliance to sovereignty. This isn't just about health; it’s about continental security."

Rosemary Mburu, the Executive Director of WACI Health said with a 41 percent surge in outbreaks and a 70 percent drop in aid, Africa can no longer remain a passenger in its own survival.

“We are demanding that the communities most affected by health crises lead the policy decisions that define our future," she added.

Africa has no shortage of bold commitments—from the historic Abuja Declaration's 15 percent target to the African Leadership Meeting (ALM) Investing in Health Declaration. Yet, as we face a 70 percent projected drop in international health aid alongside a 41 percent surge in disease outbreaks, the time for 'declarative diplomacy' has passed.

 The session will bring together heavyweights from the EAC, AUDA-NEPAD, and Civil Society with insights and lessons to move the continent beyond rhetoric. The objective is to finalise a CSO-driven Call to Action that will feed directly into the deliberations of the AU Heads of State.

Key issues on the agenda include:

• The Abuja Target Reframed: Challenging nations that still fund health at below 10 percent of national budgets.

• Local Manufacturing: Ending the era where Africa is last in line for life-saving vaccines and medicines.

• Domestic Resource Mobilisation: Finding African solutions for African health challenges.

The webinar serves as the definitive curtain-raiser for the AU Summit, providing a platform for those most affected by health crises to inform high-level policy decisions. 

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