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BRICS Meeting: Nigeria Reaffirms Commitment to Global Health Equity

by Haruna Gimba
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By Muhammad Amran

The Federal Government of Nigeria has reaffirmed its commitment to addressing global health challenges through enhanced cooperation, domestic reforms, and strategic investments.

Nigeria’s Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Iziaq Adekunle Salako, stated this during the 15th BRICS Health Ministers’ Meeting held in Brasilia, Brazil, the Deputy Director of Information and Public Relations at the ministry, Alaba Balogun, said in a statement issued to newsmen.

Delivering Nigeria’s national statement at the meeting, Dr Salako emphasised the importance of global solidarity in confronting the complex and interconnected threats facing public health systems, including non-communicable diseases (NCDs), pandemics, antimicrobial resistance (AMR), climate change, and dwindling health funding.

“These challenges call for stronger South-South cooperation and global solidarity to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals and create a more equitable world,” Dr. Salako stated. “Nigeria is proud to be a BRICS partner and contributor to the new thinking needed in today’s changing health landscape.”

Dr. Salako outlined the ongoing implementation of Nigeria’s Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative, the operational arm of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

The initiative is anchored on four pillars: effective governance, an efficient and equitable health system, and unlocking the healthcare value chain and health security.

According to the Minister of State for Health, digitalisation, smarter spending, data-driven decision-making, and cultural transformation were cited as cross-cutting themes.

“In a significant shift toward self-reliance, Nigeria is increasing domestic resource mobilisation and enhancing its pharmaceutical and diagnostic production capacity. This includes revitalising primary healthcare, promoting pooled procurement mechanisms, and scaling digital health and artificial intelligence tools across the system.”

One of the standout achievements mentioned was Nigeria’s HPV vaccination campaign. Dr. Salako reported that over 14 million girls aged 9–14 were vaccinated by May 2025, the highest number achieved globally in a single round.

In response to a decline in Official Development Assistance (ODA), he highlighted that Nigeria committed an additional $200 million in its 2025 budget to sustain its AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria programs.

Additionally, the Minister informed his fellow BRICS counterparts that Nigeria is addressing the social determinants of health and introducing policies to reduce the modifiable risk factors of non-communicable diseases.

Nigeria’s proactive stance includes hosting the next high-level ministerial conference on antimicrobial resistance in June 2026 in Abuja. Dr Salako also invited deeper partnerships with BRICS nations on pharmaceutical innovation, biomedical research, phytomedicine development, and academic exchange programs.

 “Our collective efforts will serve as an impetus to achieve Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Goal 3, ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being for all without leaving anyone behind,” Dr Salako concluded. “In the context of our shared humanity, we must act together. Humanity is one.”

The meeting, chaired by Brazil, underscored BRICS countries’ shared intent to build resilient, inclusive, and sustainable health systems amid global health uncertainties.

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