A powerful video recently circulated on social media showing dozens of HIV-positive protesters marching openly toward Haiti’s prime minister’s office — a rare act in a country where the virus remains deeply stigmatized.
“Call the health minister! We are dying!” the group chanted, their faces uncovered in defiance and desperation.
Risking social rejection, these protesters sounded the alarm as Haiti faces a critical shortage of HIV medication, just months after the Trump administration cut more than 90% of USAID’s foreign aid contracts, slashing $60 billion in global aid.
Near the northern city of Cap-Haitien, Dr. Eugene Maklin struggles to convey this harsh reality to his more than 550 HIV patients, who now face an uncertain future.
“It’s hard to explain to them, to tell them that they’re not going to find medication,” he said. “It’s like a suicide.”
More than 150,000 people in Haiti have HIV or AIDS, according to official estimates, although nonprofits believe the number is much higher.
David Jeune, a 46-year-old hospital community worker, is among them. He became infected 19 years ago after having unprotected sex. “I was scared to let people know because they would point their finger at you, saying you are infecting others with AIDS,” he said.
His fear was so great he didn’t tell anyone, not even his mother. But that fear dissipated with support from nonprofits. His confidence grew to the point where he participated in Monday’s protest.
“I hope Trump will change his mind,” he said, noting that his medication will run out in November. “Let the poor people get the medication they need.”
Patrick Jean Noël, a representative of Haiti’s Federation of Associations of HIV, said at least five clinics, including one that served 2,500 patients, were forced to close after the USAID funding cuts.
“We can’t stay silent,” he said. “More people need to come out.”
But most people with HIV in Haiti are reluctant to do so, said Dr. Sabine Lustin, executive director of the Haiti-based nonprofit Promoters of Zero AIDS Goal.
The stigma is so strong that many patients are reluctant to pick up their medication in person. Instead, it is sent via packages wrapped as gifts to avoid suspicion, Lustin said.
Lustin’s organization, which helps some 2,000 people across Haiti, receives funding from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While their funding hasn’t been cut, she said shortly after Trump was sworn in, the agency banned prevention activities because they targeted a group that is not a priority. By that, Lustin said she understood they meant gay men.
That means the organization can no longer distribute up to 200,000 free condoms a year or educate people about the disease.
“You risk an increase in infections,” she said. “You have a young population who is sexually active who can’t receive the prevention message and don’t have access to condoms.”
On a recent sunny morning, a chorus of voices drowned out the din of traffic in Haiti’s capital, growing louder as protesters with HIV marched defiantly toward the office of Haiti’s prime minister.
“We are here to tell the government that we exist, and we are people like any other person,” one woman told reporters.
Another marching alongside her said, “Without medication, we are dying. This needs to change.”
Three days after Monday’s protest, the leader of Haiti’s transitional presidential council, Louis Gerald Gilles, announced he had met with activists and would try to secure funding.
Meanwhile, nonprofit organizations across Haiti are fretting.
“I don’t know what we’re going to do,” said Marie Denis-Luque, founder and executive director of CHOAIDS, a nonprofit that cares for Haitian orphans with HIV/AIDS. “We only have medication until July.”
Her voice broke as she described her frantic search for donations for the orphans, who are cared for by HIV-positive women in Cap-Haïtien after gang violence forced them to leave Port-au-Prince.
Denis-Luque said she has long advocated for the orphans’ visibility.
“We can’t keep hiding these children. They are part of society,” she said, adding that she smiled when she saw the video of Monday’s protest. “I was like, whoa, things have changed tremendously. The stigma is real, but I think what I saw... was very encouraging to me. They can’t be silenced.”
Experts say Haiti could see a rise in HIV infections because medications are dwindling at a time when gang violence and poverty are surging.
Dr. Alain Casseus, infectious disease division chief at Zanmi Lasante, the largest non-governmental healthcare provider in Haiti, said they expected to see a surge in patients given the funding cuts, but that hasn’t happened because traveling by land in Haiti is dangerous as violent gangs control main roads and randomly open fire on vehicles.
He warned that abruptly stopping medication is dangerous, especially because many Haitians do not have access to or cannot afford nutritious food to strengthen their immune systems.
“It wouldn’t take long, especially given the situation in Haiti, to enter a very bad phase,” he said of HIV infections. And even if some funding becomes available, a lapse in medication could cause resistance to it, he said.
Casseus said gang violence could also accelerate rates of infection through rapes or physical violence as medication runs out.
At the New Hope Hospital run by Maklin in Haiti’s northern region, shelves are running empty. He used to receive more than $165,000 a year to help HIV/AIDS patients, but that funding has dried up.
“Those people are going to die,” he said. “We don’t know how or where we’re going to get more medication.”
The medication controls the infection and allows many to have an average life expectancy. Without it, the virus attacks a person’s immune system, and they develop AIDS, the late stage of an HIV infection.
Reaction is swift when Dr. Maklin tells his patients that in two months, the hospital won’t have any HIV medication left.
“They say, ‘No, no, no, no!’” he said. “They want to keep living.”