US signs health agreement with Eswatini

ReutersReuters

US signs health agreement with Eswatini

By Katharine Jackson

Fri, December 12, 2025 at 2:14 PM UTC

1 min read

By Katharine Jackson

WASHINGTON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Eswatini signed a five-year health cooperation agreement on Friday, ​the State Department said, as the Trump administration continues ‌its global health plan to provide aid while requiring investment from the country ‌receiving it.

The $242 million memorandum of understanding between the countries states that the U.S. intends to provide up to $205 million for investments in health data collection, disease monitoring and response and HIV prevention ⁠and treatment; Eswatini, in ‌turn, will increase domestic health spending by $37 million during the five-year period, the department said.

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The agreement also ‍includes delivery of lenacapavir, a U.S.-made HIV prevention drug, to the African nation, it said.

"The signing places Eswatini on a clear path to ​achieving the long-term goal of an effective, sustainable, and efficient ‌health system while underscoring a mutual commitment to safeguarding health gains, protecting American and Eswatini citizens alike," State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said in a statement.

Over the past month, the U.S. has signed health cooperation agreements with Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and Lesotho. ⁠Similar bilateral health agreements with dozens ​of other countries receiving U.S. health ​assistance are expected in the coming weeks, the department said.

The Trump administration unveiled its "America First Global Health ‍Strategy" in September, ⁠a new approach to overseas aid that seeks to improve target countries' self-reliance in managing their health sectors.

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In a ⁠separate deal announced in November, Eswatini received $5.1 million from the U.S. to accept ‌third-country nationals deported by the Trump administration.

(Reporting by Katharine ‌Jackson; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

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