The Independent has released a new documentary, Death Sentence: The real cost of Trump’s aid cuts on HIV, a powerful film about the impact of the Trump administration’s aid cuts on HIV and AIDS treatment.
Presented by The Independent’s Chief International Correspondent Bel Trew, Death Sentence goes to the hardest hit areas of Uganda and Zimbabwe, and reveals in heartbreaking detail the deadly impact of the Trump administration’s abrupt funding freeze to its global HIV response programmes. Despite a State Department waiver for lifesaving-care reportedly in place, funding is still not getting through: AIDS clinics are having to close, patients have lost access to their medication and are dying, and experts warn of a surge in infections and medication-resistant HIV strains.
New modelling of UNAIDS data by The Independent reveals the true impact of dismantling PEPFAR (the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief), which has been the cornerstone of global efforts to tackle HIV and AIDS, showing that if funding is not reinstated and no alternatives are found, the HIV/AIDS death toll will actually triple by 2030 – reaching the devastating levels seen in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Death Sentence hears first hand from those on the frontlines of the epidemic, global health experts, and President Trump himself:
“This film captures the devastating impact that the US aid cuts are already having on some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people,” says Bel Trew, Chief International Correspondent, The Independent. “While the world had been on track to end the AIDS pandemic by 2030, the UN now estimates that, should this aid not be reinstated, there will be four million additional AIDS deaths and six million additional HIV infections over the next five years.”
Death Sentence joins The Independent’s growing roster of high-quality, high-impact documentaries and marks the latest production from The Independent’s talent-led content hub, Independent Studio, which launched in April.
Previous releases include Cancelled, interrogating the rise and fall of Aung San Suu Kyi; The A-Word, an unflinching look at the fallout from the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade; and The Body in the Woods, a damning expose exploring Ukraine’s search for the missing during Russia’s invasion.
These powerful documentaries sit within Independent Studio, which puts truly independent, trusted voices at the forefront of its output, and aims to drive deep engagement with audiences through original video formats, podcasts, newsletters and more. Independent Studio spans verticals from entertainment and lifestyle to sport and current affairs and lives on-site, across major platforms such as YouTube and Spotify, and in email inboxes.
Death Sentence: The real cost of Trump’s aid cuts on HIV is available to stream on The Independent now. Further reporting from Bel Trew on the impact of these cuts is available to read here and here.