News (Updated February 12, 2005)

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Wednesday February 9, 01:46 PM

 

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao spends Lunar New Year with AIDS victims

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BEIJING (AFP) - Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao spent the Lunar New Year with AIDS victims in a destitute area that has become a symbol of the nation's struggle with the rapidly spreading disease.

Wen's three-day trip took him to Henan province in the country's interior, state media said Wednesday, where large numbers of farmers have contracted the deadly virus by selling blood under highly unhygienic conditions.

"Children have lost their parents because of AIDS, and old people have lost their sons and daughters. It has destroyed many families," Wen was quoted by state TV as saying, as footage showed him shaking hands with an AIDS victim.

"But with the loving care of the Communist Party and the government, we have again established a sunny home," he said.

China estimates it has 840,000 HIV/AIDS sufferers although international AIDS experts say the actual number is much higher.

The state TV report seemed part of an orchestrated effort by the official media to signal the government's concern for the disadvantaged in modern Chinese society.

One day earlier, state media had widely reported a trip by President Hu Jintao to southern Guizhou province, one of China's poorest regions.

State TV showed Wen's motorcade pass through a barren, snow-covered landscape, with smiling peasants greeting a concerned-looking premier at every stop.

The itinerary included Wenlou, a village whose name is known throughout China because more than half its residents are believed to have contracted AIDS.

"I would like to use this opportunity to express my heartfelt sympathy with the nation's AIDS victims," Wen was quoted as saying.

"I also express my deep gratitude for the selfless contributions of officials, health workers and volunteers towards curbing AIDS," he said.

The report highlighted government efforts to relieve the suffering of the area's AIDS victims, saying the situation had improved greatly over the past year, while showing medical staff working in clean, computer-equipped rooms.

Wen has emerged as the most prominent official figure advocating endeavors to combat AIDS.

 

 

07 Feb 2005 21:04:59 GMT
Source: Reuters
WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (Reuters) - U.S. foreign aid would rise 10.7 percent under the proposed White House budget released on Monday, with more money to fight HIV/AIDS and help countries that reform economically and politically.

State Department figures showed the U.S. foreign operations budget, which funds everything from child health care programs and aid to refugees to foreign military sales and debt relief, would rise to $22.82 billion from an estimated $19.71 billion.

Rather than being dedicated to specific nations, most of the rise would go to double funds for the Millennium Challenge Corporation, which rewards nations that pursue "good governance and sound policies," to $3 billion from $1.49 billion.

This is below the $5 billion that U.S. President George W. Bush initially promised he would seek for the Millennium Challenge Corporation, an apparent reflection of past congressional reluctance to fully fund it.

At present, 17 countries are eligible to apply for the corporation funds: Armenia, Benin, Bolivia, Cape Verde, Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka and Vanuatu.

The other large increase was for the U.S. Global HIV/AIDS Initiative, whose funds would rise to $1.97 billion from $1.37 billion. The effort seeks to help the most severely afflicted countries around the world combat the disease.

 

S.Africa's Mbeki Vows AIDS Action, Critics Persist

CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South African President Thabo Mbeki vowed on Friday to step up the battle against HIV/AIDS, saying his government's program was among the world's best.But critics said his pledge fell far short of what was required to stem the disease that affects more in South Africa than in any other nation.

Around 5.3 million of South Africa's 45 million people are infected with HIV.

After massive public pressure, the government announced plans in 2003 to roll out anti-retroviral treatment to HIV-positive South Africans. But the program has hardly made a dent in the number with full-blown AIDS -- estimated at around 400,000 -- who urgently need ARVs to stay alive.

Officials initially vowed to have 53,000 patients on treatment by March 2004 but only some 20,000 have been reached.

South Africa has blamed medical staff shortages, problems with drug supplies and other factors for the delay.

Mbeki devoted no more than a few lines of Friday's 19-page state of the nation speech to the pandemic, saying his government's AIDS plan was "among the best in the world" and "being implemented with greater vigor."

AIDS group Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) said Mbeki's statements lacked details and showed a lack of commitment to tackling a scourge his predecessor, anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela, called the greatest threat facing the nation.

"People out there need information, they need to know at which hospitals, which clinics to access ARVs (anti-retroviral drugs)," TAC spokeswoman Thembeka Majali told the South African Press Association.

The TAC said on Thursday it would march to parliament on Feb. 16 to demand that 200,000 people be put on treatment by the start of next year.

"It is as if he (Mbeki) lives in a different (South Africa) from the millions of people suffering and dying from HIV/AIDS," said the KwaZulu-Natal-based opposition Inkatha Freedom Party, whose leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi has lost two children to AIDS.

 

Wednesday February 9, 08:35 AM

Sweden and ADB to establish HIV/AIDS Trust Fund

 
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MANILA (AFP) - Sweden and the Asian Development Bank are to establish an HIV/AIDS Trust Fund to help raise regional awareness of the disease, the Swedish ambassador to the Philippines Annika Markovic announced.

Markovic said the Swedish government has pledged 14 million dollars to the trust which will be administered by the ADB.

Stockholm and the ADB will formally establish the trust at a two-day forum on HIV/AIDS in the Philippines later this month.

Speaking at a joint press conference to announce the forum, Markovic said: "Our aim is to bring together the various sectors of society to look at ways in which HIV/AIDS can be fought in the Philippines."

She said the trust would not only help countries like the Philippines, where the officially recorded incidence of HIV/AIDS is quite low, but other countries in the region.

Austere Panadero, vice-chairman of the Philippine National AIDS Council, said that since Manila's first reported AIDS case in 1984 some 2,200 cases of HIV and AIDS have been reported in the country.

He said 69 percent were aged between 20 and 39 and 63 percent were male.

"Sexual intercourse remains the leading mode of HIV transmission in the Philippines, accounting for 92 percent of the cases," he said.

And he noted that returning overseas Filipino workers account for 33 percent of the reported cases.

Jean-Marc Olive, World Health Organisation (WHO) representative in the Philippines, said: "There can be no place for complacency."

"While the official numbers of HIV/AIDS cases in the Philippines is extremely low compared with other parts of the region, we need to know what the reality is on the ground."

He said some estimates put the number of HIV infections in the Philippines anywhere between 6,000 and 10,000.

"The infection rate is increasing as more Filipinos return home with HIV. We even have children now infected.

"What we are seeing now are some very serious warning flags being raised. That is why this forum is so important ... action has to be taken now.

"There is no point in leaving it until it is too late."

The forum is being jointly organised by the Philippine National Aids Council, the WHO, the ADB, UNAIDS and the Swedish government.

 

 

Sex workers must fight to survive men as well as AIDS in India


BANGALORE, India (AFP) - After having had acid thrown in her face by a spurned lover, chili powder shoved inside her during a gang rape and money stolen by police, Asara says she knows one thing: "I am very put off by men."
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And she is not alone in India's premier high tech city, Bangalore, where an estimated 25,000 sex workers who are among the highest at risk for HIV infection also face beatings, rape and extortion from police, lovers, husbands and rowdies.

Asara at least found a little safety with a group of sex workers in Bangalore called Swati Mahila Sangha (women's forum) who promote condom use as well as challenge police arrests for soliciting.

Of the dozen women who met in January to discuss their lives, their stories were of a kind -- one woman narrated how rowdies who took her to a deserted spot and raped her without condoms, another told of a boyfriend who lured her to the city and sold her as a sex worker.

Getting women like this to organize is critical in India to prevent the spread of HIV, the virus that leads to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). India has five million people infected with HIV. The women say getting the police to help instead of hinder them would be a big first step.

Sex workers interviewed in Bangalore allege police extort money under a section of the Immoral Traffic Prevention law for acts like dropping their pallu (garment covering the upper body) -- which can lead to a fine of 500 rupees or three months in jail.

The women say they often instead pay a bribe or worse get raped by policemen who also steal their money but a top officer denied the allegation.

"I don't think this happens," said Bangalore Police Commissioner S. Mariswamy in an interview. "If any such cases come before us we will investigate and take appropriate action."

India's National Crime Bureau said there was only one case of extortion by police in all of India in 2002, the latest year for which figures are available, and no convictions. In the same year there were two cases of custodial rape by police and no arrests or convictions.

In the same period, arrests under the Immoral Traffic Prevention law rose 28 percent to 11,242 people.

The mismatch between anecdotal complaints and official figures could be because sex workers have few options in reporting police harassment, says Tripti Tandon, senior project director for the Lawyers's Collective, an advocacy group for sex workers and those with HIV or AIDS who seek legal help.

"They could complain to the National Human Rights Commission, but in effect that's not practical because many don't want to be noted as sex workers," Tandon said. "It would be very difficult to complain directly to police."

The majority of the sex workers in Bangalore are street-based with the next largest group, about 29 percent, working from home and eight percent operating in hotels or lodges.

Only seven percent work in brothels, according to the Karnataka Health Protection Trust funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation AIDS initiative called Avahan.

That makes it difficult to mobilize sex workers as is done in Calcutta -- cited as a model for dealing with police harassment, promoting condom use and establishing a savings and credit system safety net, said Avahan director Ashok Alexander.

Avahan is promoting condom use and treating sexually transmitted infections in 50 districts in six states -- Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Mizoram and Nagaland -- where the combination of dispersed sex workers and mobile clients are the highest at risk of HIV infection.

Sex workers can earn 300 rupees (seven dollars) with several customers on a good day, compared to 50 rupees (1.16 dollars) in construction jobs such as carrying bricks on their heads.

The money is often needed to support children and parents and in many cases a husband or lover who drinks, according to the women at Swati Mahila Sangha.

"For the women, the priorities revolve around children, getting them education, food and clothes," Alexander said. "We need to look at this community as an extended family, it's not just about women having sex."

 

08 Feb 2005 14:46:07 GMT
Source: IRIN
ACHHAM, 8 February (IRIN) - Babita Biswakarma has already been through enough trauma for anyone to suffer in a lifetime. She is just seven years old. First she lost both her parents to AIDS. Then she went through over a year of mental cruelty at the hands of villagers who rejected her, calling her the 'AIDS girl'.

Her uncle then made her work as a servant in her own home after she was stripped off all her rights to her parent's property and estate. She was kicked out of school when her relatives stopped paying her fees, assuming she was HIV positive and had only months to live.

Fortunately she was helped by a local social worker in her village in Achham, one of the poorest hill districts in West Nepal, 450 km northwest of the capital, Kathmandu. She was eventually brought to the capital and sheltered at the House of Rest, a local NGO providing care and support to orphans and underprivileged children.

Babita's story is not unusual. Many children like her have lost one or both their parents to HIV/AIDS as the disease become more prevalent in the mountain kingdom. According to a joint report by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) it is estimated that there are at least 13,000 orphans as result of the HIV virus in Nepal.

The social stigma the children suffer starts from the day it becomes known the parents are HIV positive and continues even after their death. They face discrimination both at the hands of adults and other children in both their villages and schools.

"Society looks down on them. They are tagged with names and the level of discrimination against them is really high," Noriko Izumi, project officer from the education and child protection section of UNICEF Nepal, told IRIN.

"It's a very serious problem for these children. They become traumatised at many levels," explained Kalu Singh Karki, HIV/AIDS officer for Save the Children (Norway). Karki has been working in the Achham district where he saw how AIDS orphans were the victims of severe discrimination from the local community. He estimated that there are around 220 orphans in twelve villages of the district.

UNAIDS estimates at least 10 percent of the 2 - 3 million Nepalese migrants working in India are HIV positive. These men are now infecting spouses and others in many parts of the country. The situation is made even worse by the inability of women to negotiate safe sex. Human trafficking is also responsible for spreading the infection.

Only a few NGOs are helping to provide shelter and sponsor the education of orphans. The number of such children is increasing every year. According to UNAIDS, around 56,000 Nepalis are estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS.

UNICEF, UNAIDS and USAID estimate that annual deaths from AIDS have increased from 3,000 four years ago to more than 6,000 in 2005. In the absence of effective care and treatment, between 10,000 and 15,000 are expected to die annually.

"When the number of adults dying due to AIDS begins to increase, children will be without parental care and will be deprived of many basic rights such as shelter, food, health, education and love and affection," said the UNICEF assessment report, 'The Increasing Vulnerability of Children in Nepal'.

There are currently about 150 orphanages, transit homes and rehabilitation centres, mostly run by NGOs, private individuals or religious bodies. Even so, only a small number of children orphaned because of AIDS are receiving any assistance. Though these facilities help children in difficulties, activists hope to avoid sending them to live in homes because they believe this will lead to institutionalisation and it isn't the best way forward.

"Community based care is the best option for the children. The main challenge is to change the social attitude of the local community where the children live," explained Karki, pointing out that Save the Children (Norway) had already initiated a care and support program in Achham district. The organisation works closely with a group of Social Volunteers Against AIDS (SOVAA) aiming to reduce the stigma suffered by people living with HIV/AIDS.

It also works with the local community and District Education Office to provide free schooling, books and clothes as well as mobilising villagers to give moral and financial support to the orphans.

"We have to seriously think about how to take care of such a highly vulnerable group of children. What they need most is both affection and education," explained Prema Regmi from ABC Nepal, one of the few NGOs that is helping the AIDS orphans.

Activists are demanding that there should be a national policy and nationwide advocacy on the issue.

"We cannot only think of temporary means of support," added Regmi. Since 1988, the HIV/AIDS campaign in Nepal has focused mostly on prevention and awareness. Little attention has been given to the care and support of persons living with HIVAIDS, especially those orphaned by the disease.

"The orphans do not still appear in the agenda of many donor agencies. There is absolutely no funds for care and support," said Biswo Khadka from Maiti Nepal, one of the few NGOs that provides care and support to substantial numbers of orphans.

"Their numbers are growing. The support we give is just a drop in the ocean," added Khadka.

UNICEF is also working closely with local communities to change social perceptions and offer training in life skills-based education programs.

"The children orphaned from AIDS need protection and care. This is possible only by making the community sensitive and aware to combat the social stigma and prejudice against the innocent children," explained Izumi from UNICEF.

In 2004, a global framework was prepared by UNICEF, UNAIDS and USAID for the protection, care and support of orphans and vulnerable children in a world learning to live with HIV and AIDS. The document is targeted at senior leaders and decision-makers around the world who can influence policies, programmes and resources directed at orphans and vulnerable children.

Globally, UNAIDS estimates there are at least 15 million children under 18 who have lost their parents to AIDS.


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