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We must do more - Mandela
01/12/2007 23:27  - (SA)  

  • Thousands flock to 46664 bash
  • Mbeki: People don't use condoms
  • 'There's progress with Aids'
  • Aids battle 'far from won'
  • 'We must overcome Aids stigma'
  • Johannesburg - The decline in the number of people living with Aids in the world is encouraging, but more needs to be done to stop new infections, former president Nelson Mandela said on Saturday.

    Mandela addressed a crowd of about 15 000 at the fifth international 46664 concert he has hosted to raise awareness of the disease, held this year to mark World Aids Day.

    Recent UN figures estimate that the number of Aids cases fell from almost 40 million last year to 33.2 million in 2007.

    "This lower figure suggests that prevention programmes have been successful in bringing down infection rates," Mandela said.

    "That trend is encouraging, but it is still alarming that for every person receiving treatment four others are newly infected."

    "If we are to stop the Aids epidemic from expanding we need to break the cycle of new HIV infections. All of us working together with government, communities and civil society can make the difference that is needed.

    "Together we have the power to change the course of destiny," he said to rapturous applause.

    Wearing a sweat shirt emblazoned with 46664 - the number apartheid prison authorities gave him - the 89-year-old statesman beamed and waved at the crowd who chanted his name.

    Since stepping down as South Africa's first black president in 1999, Mandela, whose son died from the disease, has championed the cause of Aids victims.

    'It is an outrage'

    About 5.5 million of the 48 million South Africans are infected with the Aids virus - the highest number in the world - and about 900 people in the country die of the disease every day.

    At the event, the singer Annie Lennox expressed her anger at the number of children who die from Aids-related diseases.

    "Why is this happening?" Lennox asked. "It is an outrage and it needs to be dealt with.

    "It is unacceptable that children die from a preventable disease. Treatment works. Get your government to do something about it.

    The reference was to South Africa's often confusing message about antiretroviral drugs, and the slow rollout of the lifesaving medicines.

    Star after star appealed to the crowd to heed the slogan of the campaign - "It is in your hands" - calling on them to get tested and practice safe sex.

     
     



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