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Press
Release..............................
UNESCAP News Services
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Date 20
November 2003
Press Release No: L/42/2003; SG/SM/9014; AIDS/65; OBV/393
AIDS EPIDEMIC 'CONTINUES ITS LETHAL MARCH', AS
INTERNATIONAL ACTION STILL FAR SHORT OF WHAT IS NEEDED, SAYS
SECRETARY-GENERAL ON WORLD AIDS DAY
Following is Secretary-General Kofi Annan's message
on the occasion of World AIDS Day, observed 1 December:
Two years ago, the world's nations agreed that
defeating HIV/AIDS would require commitment, resources and action.
At the General Assembly's special session on HIV/AIDS in 2001,
they adopted the Declaration of Commitment, a set of specific,
time-bound targets for fighting the epidemic.
Today, we have the commitment. Our resources
are increasing. But the action is still far short of what is
needed.
Significant new funding to fight the epidemic
has been pledged, both by individual governments and through
the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. The
vast majority of countries have in place broad national strategies
to combat HIV/AIDS. A growing number of corporations are adopting
policies on HIV/AIDS in the workplace. Increasingly, community
and faith-based groups -- which have often taken the lead in
the fight against AIDS -- are working as full partners with
governments and others in mounting a coordinated response.
But, at the same time, the epidemic continues
its lethal march around the world, with few signs of slowing
down. In the course of the past year, every minute of every
day, some 10 people were infected. In the hardest-hit regions,
life expectancy is plummeting. HIV/AIDS is spreading at an alarming
rate among women, who now account for half of those infected
worldwide. And the epidemic is expanding most rapidly in regions
which had previously been largely spared -- especially in Eastern
Europe and across all of Asia, from the Urals to the Pacific
Ocean.
We have failed to reach several of the Declaration's
targets set for this year. Even more important, we are not on
track to begin reducing the scale and impact of the epidemic
by the target year of 2005. By then, we should have cut by a
quarter the number of young people infected with HIV in the
worst affected countries; we should have halved the rate at
which infants become infected; and we should have comprehensive
care programmes in place everywhere. At the current rate, we
will not achieve any of those targets by 2005.
Clearly, we must work even harder to match our
commitment with the necessary resources and action. We cannot
claim that competing challenges are more important, or more
urgent. We must keep AIDS at the top of our political and practical
agenda.
That is why we must continue to speak up openly
about AIDS. No progress will be achieved by being timid, refusing
to face unpleasant facts, or prejudging our fellow human beings
-- still less by stigmatizing people living with HIV/AIDS. Let
no one imagine that we can protect ourselves by building barriers
between "us" and "them". In the ruthless
world of AIDS, there is no us and them. And in that world, silence
is death.
On this World AIDS Day, I urge you to join me
in speaking up loud and clear about HIV/AIDS. Join me in tearing
down the walls of silence, stigma and discrimination that surround
the epidemic. Join me, because the fight against HIV/AIDS begins
with you.
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