
The United States Department of State and the Federal Republic of Nigeria have signed a transformative five-year bilateral health Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), marking a major shift in U.S. foreign aid under the America First Global Health Strategy.
The agreement, signed yesterday, outlines a massive $5 billion total co-investment aimed at overhauling Nigeria’s health infrastructure while introducing strict new conditions regarding the protection of religious populations.
Under the terms of the pact, the United States has pledged nearly $2.1 billion in funding over the next five years.
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In a historic move toward self-reliance, Nigeria has committed to a domestic expenditure of nearly $3 billion over the same period.
This represents the largest co-investment ever made by a partner nation under the new U.S. strategy.
The $2.1 billion in American taxpayer funds will be directed toward essential services, including preventative and curative care for HIV, tuberculosis, malaria, and polio, maternal and child health initiatives and infrastructure strengthening for both public and faith-based facilities.
A distinctive feature of this MOU is the formal integration of Nigeria’s 900 faith-based clinics and hospitals into the national health framework.
These facilities currently serve over 30% of the Nigerian population.
The U.S. intends to prioritise these Christian healthcare providers to complement the existing public-sector network.
The MOU is explicitly tied to the Nigerian government’s efforts to protect Christian populations from extremist religious violence.
The Trump Administration has linked the continued flow of this health assistance to Nigeria’s measurable progress in securing vulnerable religious communities.
The State Department issued a stern caveat: the President and Secretary of State retain the authority to pause or terminate programmes that do not align with U.S. national interests or fail to meet safety expectations for religious populations.
This bilateral agreement serves as the inaugural blueprint for the America First Global Health Strategy.
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By moving away from traditional multilateral aid in favour of direct bilateral deals with high domestic co-investment, the U.S. aims to transition partner nations toward long-term health self-reliance and ensure strategic alignment between U.S. funding and shared values.
The State Department indicated that this is only the beginning, with plans to sign similar multi-year agreements with dozens of other recipient nations in the coming weeks.
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