WORLD
AIDS DAY-2013
But
ongoing discrimination against sufferers is the biggest obstacle to winning the
war, according to the head of the United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/Aids
(UNAIDS).Speaking to The Independent
on Sunday on the eve of World Aids Day, UNAIDS executive director Michel
Sidibé said: "We are winning against this epidemic, we are seeing a
decline in new infections, an increase in people treated... we have broken the
conspiracy of silence."For the first time, he said, authorities can see
"an end to an epidemic that has wrought such staggering devastation around
the world".He added: "People living with HIV can live long and
healthy lives, can now protect their partners from becoming infected, and can
keep their children free from HIV."But Mr Sidibé also warned: "We
have not been able to change completely the perception of people against the
most-at-risk populations. The stigma, discrimination and criminalisation of
those people – sex workers, people who inject drugs, men who have sex with men
– all those groups are mainly at risk of continuing to be completely
forgotten."There are more than 70 countries with "homophobic
laws" – something which demonstrates "we still have a long way to
go".
Discrimination remains a major obstacle in many parts of the
world. One in seven people living with HIV has been denied access to healthcare
and more than one in 10 has been refused employment. And while the global
picture is good, austerity-stricken Europe is at risk of repeated outbreaks of
HIV, warned the World Health Organization last night.In a bid to end the
persecution of people with HIV/Aids, UNAIDS is launching a "zero
discrimination" campaign, backed by Nobel Peace Prize Winner Daw Aung San
Suu Kyi, to mark World Aids Day.Speaking at today's launch of the campaign to
launch a Zero Discrimination Day on 1 March 2014, she said: "We can all
make a difference by reaching out and letting people lead a life of dignity,
irrespective of who they are."
Aids-related deaths in the Caribbean dropped 50 per cent between
2001 and 2012 (falling from 24,000 to 11,000), but in Jamaica 37 per cent of
gay men are HIV positive. Mexico has an HIV rate among gay men of 17 per cent;
Guyana 19 per cent. Meanwhile, 17 per cent of Guyanese sex workers are HIV
positive, against 1 per cent in Mexico.Across Latin America there was a 37 per
cent drop in Aids deaths between 2001 and 2012 – from 82,000 to 52,000. With
its high deprivation and population density, Brazil's HIV rate is among the
highest; 10 per cent of gay men, and 5 per cent of sex workers, are HIV
positive. In Peru, where less than 0.4 per cent of the population is HIV
positive, 12 per cent of gay men are infected.In sub-Saharan countries the
number of new cases of HIV was 40 per cent less last year than in 2001 – almost
a million fewer cases. But with some 1.6 million people infected last year, the
continent's struggle with Aids and HIV continues. In Swaziland, one in four
adults (26 per cent) is HIV positive. Across the continent there were
1.2 million Aids-related deaths last year. The majority of those infected
with HIV were sex workers and gay men. In Ivory Coast half of "men who
sleep with men" are HIV positive. By contrast, in developed Middle East
and North Africa, numbers acquiring HIV rose by more than 50 per cent, but
still remained at just 32,000 people in 2012.
HIV infections have increased by 13 per cent, or 100,000 people,
since 2006. The majority of people diagnosed with HIV were those who inject
drugs, and gay men. Across the continent, less than 1 per cent of the
population was HIV positive. The Ukraine, Belarus and Spain had the highest HIV
rates among needle users, with 21, 17 and 16 per cent respectively. The number
of Aids-related deaths in the region has increased from 36,000 in 2001 to
91,000 people last year. New infections among drug users in Greece have risen,
despite a general decline elsewhere in Europe, with authorities blaming funding
cuts in treatment centres.Aids deaths were on the rise in East Asia last year,
increasing from 18,000 in 2001 to 41,000. A fifth of Thailand's gay men and
needle users were HIV positive, compared with 0.6 per cent of the general population.
In the Philippines only 1 per cent of gay men had been infected, but 14 per
cent of drug users were positive. In Indonesia 9 per cent of sex workers were
HIV positive.
Prof. John Kurakar
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