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Press
Release..............................
UNESCAP News Services
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Date 1March
2004
Press Release No: L/03/2004
THE UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY-GENERAL'S MESSAGE
ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY
8 March 2004
As we mark this year's International Women's
Day, we look at the devastating toll the global HIV/AIDS epidemic
is taking on women, and the critical role of women in fighting
AIDS.
At the beginning, many people thought of AIDS
as a disease striking mainly at men. Even a decade ago, statistics
indicated that women were less affected. But a terrifying pattern
has since emerged. All over the world, women are increasingly
bearing the brunt of the epidemic. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa,
more than half of all adults living with HIV/AIDS are women.
Infection rates in young African women are far higher than in
young men. In the world as a whole, at least half of those newly
infected are women, and among people younger than 24, girls
and young women now make up nearly two thirds of those living
with HIV. If these rates of infection continue, women will soon
become the majority of the global total of people infected.
As AIDS strikes at the lifeline of society that
women represent, a vicious cycle develops. Poor women are becoming
even less economically secure as a result of AIDS, often deprived
of rights to housing, property or inheritance or even adequate
health services. In rural areas, AIDS has caused the collapse
of coping systems that for centuries have helped women to feed
their families during during times of drought and famine --
leading in turn to family break-ups, migration, and yet greater
risk of HIV infection. As AIDS forces girls to drop out of school
-- whether they are forced to take care of a sick relative,
run the household, or help support the family -- they fall deeper
into poverty. Their own children in turn are less likely to
attend school -- and more likely to become infected. Thus, society
pays many times over the deadly price of the impact on women
of AIDS.
Why, then, are women -- usually not the ones with
the most sexual partners outside marriage, or more likely than
men to be injecting drug users -- more vulnerable to infection?
Usually, because society's inequalities puts them at risk. There
are many factors, including poverty, abuse and violence, lack
of information, coercion by older men, and men having several
partners. That is why many mainstream prevention strategies
are untenable, for example those based exclusively on the 'ABC'
approach -- "abstain, be faithful, use a condom".
Where sexual violence is widespread, abstinence or insisting
on condom use is not a realistic option for women and girls.
Nor does marriage always provide the answer. In many parts of
the developing world, the majority of women will be married
by age 20, and have higher rates of HIV than their unmarried,
sexually active peers -- often because their husbands have several
partners.
What is needed is positive, concrete change that
will give more power and confidence to women and girls, and
transform relations between women and men at all levels of society.
Change that will strengthen legal protection of
women's property and inheritance rights, and ensure they have
full access to prevention options -- including microbicides
and female condoms.
Change that makes men assume their responsibility
-- whether ensuring their daughters get an education; abstaining
from sexual behaviour that puts others at risk; forgoing relations
with girls and very young women; or understanding that when
it comes to violence against women, there are no grounds for
tolerance and no tolerable excuses.
That is why, last month, UNAIDS launched a Global
Coalition on Women and AIDS as an effort to ensure that the
empowerment of women is at the centre of the response, and to
build on the critical role that women already play in the fight
against HIV/AIDS worldwide. In most countries and communities
I have visited around the world, it is women who have been the
most active and effective advocates and activists in the fight
against AIDS. Everywhere that the epidemic is taking a severe
toll, there are heroic women's groups and cooperatives doing
remarkable work on prevention and care. Supporting these women,
and encouraging others to follow their example, must be our
strategy for the future. It is among them that the real heroes
of this war are to be found. It is our job to furnish them with
strength, resources and hope.
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