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U.S. announces $1.6 billion health partnership with Kenya under new global assistance model

December 04, 2025 | US Department of State


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U.S. announces $1.6 billion health partnership with Kenya under new global assistance model
Unidentified Speaker 1, identified in the transcript as a U.S. official leading the State Department event, announced a framework signing with Kenya under an "America First" global health strategy and said the United States will invest $1,600,000,000 in health assistance to Kenya over the next five years.

The U.S. official framed the agreement as a departure from earlier aid models that channeled large sums through international NGOs. "We're not going to spend billions of dollars funding the NGO industrial complex," the official said, arguing that prior approaches left host countries with little influence and that the new model will work directly with Kenyan institutions and seek to leverage private-sector investment to build sustainable domestic health systems.

Unidentified Speaker 2, a Kenyan official speaking after the announcement, thanked the U.S. delegation and described a long-standing partnership. The Kenyan official said the two countries have collaborated for more than 25 years and that past cooperation has mobilized more than $7,000,000,000 in health and development investments. He added that Kenya is committing $850,000,000 to support the newly announced effort and is mobilizing roughly $3,000,000,000 in domestic resources for health infrastructure.

The Kenyan official also described program priorities the framework will support, including supply of modern hospital equipment, more efficient delivery of health commodities, strengthening the health workforce and expanding health insurance coverage. He said the framework will boost "disease surveillance and emergency preparedness" and noted Kenya already integrates about 107,000 community health promoters into its health system.

Both speakers linked the announcement to regional security work in Haiti: the U.S. official praised Kenya's role stabilizing Haiti and urged other countries in the hemisphere and beyond to contribute personnel and funding; the Kenyan official reiterated Kenya's continued engagement in Haiti and asked other states and regional bodies, including the Organization of American States, to step forward.

The event concluded with plans for the visiting delegation to join a related Institute of Peace event on the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda. The signing described in the remarks was presented as the first under the administration's global-health framework and was characterized by both speakers as a partnership with financial commitments from the United States and Kenya.

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