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..Press
Release................................
UNESCAP News Services
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Date 10
July 2004
Press Release No: L/41/2004
(Embargoed: 11 July 2004 –1900 hours Bangkok time) (Please
check against delivery)
THE SECRETARY GENERAL
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ADDRESS TO THE XV INTERNATIONAL AIDS CONFERENCE
Bangkok, 11 July 2004
Prime Minister,
Distinguished Ministers,
Ladies, gentlemen and friends,
I am delighted to be here today, among so many
leading lights in the fight against HIV/AIDS. It is the dedication
and resolve of people like you that is our best hope in the
struggle.
It is fitting that we are meeting in Thailand,
which has had such remarkable success in curbing the spread
of HIV/AIDS. Prime Minister, your recipe for success was a powerful
combination: visionary political leadership at an early stage
of the epidemic; allocation of serious resources; strong civil
society involvement; along with massive campaigns for public
awareness and condom use promotion.
Thank you, Thailand, for showing us that progress
is possible. The world now looks to your continued leadership
in sustaining that success, despite warnings of a possible resurgence.
It is also appropriate that this conference is being held in
Asia, where the virus is spreading at an alarming rate. One
in four infections last year happened on this continent. There
is no time to lose if we are to prevent the epidemic in Asia
from spinning out of control.
At this conference, many countries around the world are being
represented by their health ministers. But let us be clear:
the fight against HIV/AIDS requires leadership from all parts
of Government -- and it needs to go right to the top. AIDS is
far more than a health crisis. It is a threat to development
itself.
That is why, three years ago, the Governments
of the world made a promise. At the General Assembly Special
Session on HIV/AIDS -- the first General Assembly session devoted
to a disease -- they pledged to deliver the resources and action
needed to defeat the epidemic. They adopted a number of specific,
time-bound targets, in a document we know as the Declaration
of Commitment.
Three years on, there has been progress on many
fronts.
Significant new resources have been pledged, both
by individual Member States and through the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
The vast majority of Member States have adopted comprehensive,
national strategies to combat HIV/AIDS.
Increasingly, Governments are working with civil society as
a full partner in the struggle.
And yet, we are not doing nearly well enough.
We failed to reach several of the objectives the
Declaration set for last year.
Even more important, we are not on track to begin
reducing the scale and impact of the epidemic by 2005, as we
had promised.
Meanwhile, over the past few years, we have seen
a terrifying pattern emerge: all over the world, women are increasingly
bearing the brunt of the epidemic.
Women now account for nearly half of all adult
infections. In Sub-Saharan Africa, that figure is around 58
per cent. Among people younger than 24, girls and young women
make up nearly two thirds of those living with HIV.
And yet, one third of all countries still have
no policies to ensure that women have access to prevention and
care. Knowing what we do today about the path of the epidemic,
how can we allow that to be the case?
Ladies and gentlemen,
It is clear that if the Declaration of Commitment
is to live up to its name, we will have to do much, much better
on several fronts.
Today, allow me to outline three specific areas
we must focus on.
First, we need to scale up infrastructure to support
both treatment and prevention.
Successful programmes in Africa, in Latin America,
and here in Asia, have demonstrated that prevention and treatment
can work in any setting, but only if:
- Interventions are scaled up to reach whole societies;
- they are developed inside the country, rather than imposed
from outside,
- there is strong engagement by people living with and affected
by HIV, and
- there are enough trained people to implement successful programmes
-- from community centres for awareness-raising, counselling
and testing, to clinics for treatment and care.
That means doing everything possible to ensure
that health workers living with HIV have access to anti-retroviral
therapy. In many of the most affected countries, AIDS drives
a cruel and vicious circle by striking at those who are most
badly needed to fight the epidemic.
It means stepping up efforts to train new people,
and calling in reinforcements among health workers not yet involved
in the struggle.
And it means drawing on unconventional capacity
where formal skills may be lacking. Enlisting and empowering
untapped talent among community workers, volunteers, and people
living HIV/AIDS will both help to scale up the efforts and contribute
to breaking the stigma and silence.
No less pressing is our second priority: empowering
women and girls to protect themselves against the virus.
Why are women more vulnerable to infection? Why
is that so even where they are not the ones with the most sexual
partners outside marriage, nor more likely than men to be injecting
drug users?
Usually, because society’s inequalities
puts them at risk -- unjust, unconscionable risk.
A range of factors conspires to make this so:
poverty, abuse and violence, lack of information, coercion by
older men, and men having several concurrent sexual relationships
that entrap young women in a giant network of infection.
These factors cannot be addressed piecemeal. What
is needed is real, positive change that will give more power
and confidence to women and girls. Change that will transform
relations between women and men at all levels of society.
In other words, what is needed is the education
of girls.
Only when societies recognize that educating girls is not an
option, but a necessity, will girls and young women be able
to build the knowledge, the self-confidence and the independence
they need to protect themselves from HIV/AIDS.
Once they leave school, we must work to ensure
they have job opportunities, as well as enjoy the rights to
land ownership and inheritance that too many are denied today.
And we must ensure they have full access to the
practical options that can protect them from HIV -- including
microbicides, as they become available.
That brings me to the third priority: stronger
leadership at every level – including at the top.
Leadership means showing the way by example:
- by breaking the deadly wall of silence that continues to surround
the epidemic;
- by achieving the cultural shift needed to fight it effectively;
- by working to scale up the response -- including providing
treatment to all those who need it.
We need leaders everywhere to demonstrate that
speaking up about AIDS is a point of pride, not a source of
shame. There must be no more sticking heads in the sand, no
more embarrassment, no more hiding behind a veil of apathy.
Your leadership must then translate into adequate
resources from national budgets. It must mobilize the entire
state apparatus, from Ministries of Finance down to local governments,
from Ministries of Education to Ministries of Defence. And it
must generate partnerships with every sector of society -- business,
civil society, and people living with HIV/AIDS.
But leadership comes not only from those who hold
positions of power. Leadership comes from partners who make
sure they always use a condom. Leadership comes from fathers,
husbands, sons and uncles who support and affirm the rights
of women.
Leadership comes from teachers who nurture the
dreams and aspirations of girls. Leadership comes from doctors,
nurses and counsellors who listen and provide care without judgement.
Leadership comes from the media who bring HIV/AIDS out of the
shadows, and encourage people to make responsible choices.
Leadership comes from men working to ensure that
other men assume their responsibility – in abstaining
from sexual behaviour that puts others at risk.
Leadership means freeing boys and men from some
of the cultural stereotypes and expectations that they may be
trapped in -- such as the belief that men who don't show their
wives "who's boss at home" are not real men; or that
coming into manhood means having your sexual initiation with
a sex worker when you are 13 years old.
Leadership means respecting and upholding the
human rights of all who are vulnerable to HIV/AIDS -- whether
sex workers, drug users, or men who have sex with men. That
includes their right to treatment, if they are infected.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Leadership means daring to do things differently,
because you understand that AIDS is a different kind of disease.
It stands alone in human experience, and it requires us to stand
united against it.
I am grateful to every one of you for joining
me in that mission. Thank you very much.
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