Johannesburg

Tuesday

Mostly sunny. Mild.

12°C
26°C

7 day forecasts
Aids Focus

Aids 'ABC' is failing millions

2004-07-06 22:26

Special Report

'Too late for Mbeki genocide charge'
'Too late for Mbeki genocide charge'

A doctor who was fired for giving ARVs to rape victims when it was against government policy says it is too late to charge Thabo Mbeki for genocide.

Johannesburg - Abstinence, being faithful and condom use - dubbed the ABC of HIV-Aids prevention - is not enough protection for millions of girls and women in sub-Saharan Africa.

This message came through in a live screen interview with Unicef executive director Carol Bellamy at a press launch in Johannesburg on Tuesday of two United Nations reports on Aids.

Bellamy was in Addis Ababa at the African Union summit.

The documents were the 2004 Report on the Global Aids Epidemic - released ahead of the 15th International Aids conference to be held later this month in Bangkok, Thailand - and the Report on the Secretary-General's Task Force on Women, Girls and HIV-Aids in Southern Africa.

They are the products of UNAids, the joint United Nations programme on HIV-Aids, and the labour of governments and Aids activists who had conducted worldwide research.

Three focuses of the reports, relating to women, included:

  • intergenerational sex;

  • the importance of women getting an education; and

  • violence against women.

    "While there was a pattern of girls having sex with men between five and seven years their elder and becoming infected within a year of losing their virginity, young married women who might be faithful were also at risk because of frequent, unprotected sex," said Bellamy.

    The press conference also heard that in Africa, where women were infected at an earlier age than men, the gap in HIV prevalence between the sexes was growing.

    Violence against girls and women, an accellerant to the spread of HIV-Aids, was growing globally, she said.

    The reports also said that although global spending on Aids had increased from $300m (about R1.85bn) in 1996 to nearly $5bn (about R31bn) in 2003, it was less than half of what would be needed by 2005 in developing countries.

    "The estimated $20bn would provide antiretroviral therapy to just more than six million people, of whom four million were in sub-Saharan Africa; support 22 million orphans; provide voluntary counselling and testing for 100 million adults; school-based Aids education for 900 million students and peer counselling services for 60 million young people not in school," said Mark Stirling, director of the UNAids regional support team.

    Pandemic continues to grow

    The reports further noted that in sub-Saharan Africa, adult HIV prevalence appeared to have stabilised.

    "However, a stable prevalence is possible only if Aids-associated deaths are replaced by new infections," said Stirling.

    "Thus, in sub-Saharan Africa, a stable prevalence still represents more than two million new infections each year."

    "Although the new global estimates are slightly lower than the previously published estimates, the actual number of people living with HIV has not decreased, rather the pandemic continues to grow, based on revised 2001 estimates".

    - SAPA

  • inside news24

    Weather
    Traffic
    Lottery
    Cpt: 18-27°C Sunny. Warm. Pta: 15-28°C Mostly sunny. Pleasantly warm.
    Jhb: 12-26°C Mostly sunny. Mild. Bloem: 17-30°C Sunny. Pleasantly warm.
    Dbn: 19-28°C Sprinkles early. More sun than clouds. Mild. PE: 17-30°C Sunny. Warm.
    7 day forecasts...

    Jobs - Find your dream job

    Product Manager

    Western Cape
    Evrst Business Solutions

    C# Developer

    Western Cape
    Evrst Business Solutions

    Intermediate CRM Consultant

    Western Cape - Cape Town
    Evrst Business Solutions

    Cars - Search 1000's of new and used cars

    AUDI

    2009 Audi A3 2.0 T Sportback Manual - 24000kms
    Lava Grey & Tan leather interior
    R 275 000

    TOYOTA

    Corolla Verso 160 MPV MY05
    2006
    R 135,990.00

    VOLKSWAGEN

    CitiGolf 1.6i VeloCiti 5-dr
    2007
    R 89,995.00

    VOLKSWAGEN

    Golf 4 1.6 Comfortline AT 5-dr
    2004
    R 117,995.00

    Property - Find a new home

    KLOOF

    Single Residential R4,300,000

    WAVE CREST

    Single Residential R2,880,000

    AGULHAS

    Single Residential R2,630,000

    Travel - Look, Book, Go!

    Free Games - TOO MUCH NEWS? TAKE A BREAK!

    Kalahari.net - shop online today

    Great Festive Savings on Books

    Up to 30% Off ALL Books. 2.3 million titles on SALE.

    Sleek New iPod Range. Order Your's Now!

    iPod nano 16GB - Black, Was R2,499.00 Now R2,299.00! Save R200!

    Up to 40% off Fabulous Festive Flicks

    46 000 DVDs and Blu-Ray on sale now! Pre-order Up and District 9!

    Up to 20% off ALL Music

    100s of festive new releases now in stock! Now, Bump 25, Bon Jovi & more!

    1000s of Festive Toys on Sale

    Lots of Toys, free gift wrap, lowest prices on Lego Mindstorm, Ben 10, Hannah Montana & more!

    Hot Deal of the Day!

    Up to 30% off Books

    Ends midnight, 30 November

    2.3 million titles on sale! New Stieg Larsson, Jeremy Clarkson, Jamie Oliver & more!

    Up to 40% Off Sale on All Books, Toys, CDs, DVDs & Games!