| RIGHTS-HEALTH:
Youth Join Chorus of Marginalised at UN AIDS Session
By
Mithre J. Sandrasagra

Protest
in New York demanding more funding to tackle AIDS / Credit:
William Farrington |
UNITED
NATIONS, Jun 25 (IPS) - Youth groups rallied outside United
Nations headquarters Monday to protest their exclusion from
this week's UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV-AIDS. |
The
activists' stand symbolised that youth - officially, people aged
15 to 24 - had joined the list of constituencies sidelined or excluded
by UN member states in the run up to and at the special session,
which ends Wednesday. Other groups with similar complaints included
women, family planners, lesbians and gay men.
Armed
with placards declaring "It's time for the UN to give us a
say" and "We are sounding the alarm for our lives,"
more than 100 young people from various countries assembled under
the umbrella of the International Youth Leadership Council and Advocates
for Youth, a Washington-based lobbying group.
Many
said they had paid their own way to come and voice their concerns
- only to find that access to the official proceedings was restricted
to national delegates from the 189 UN member states.
Only
a handful of countries made place for youth representatives on their
delegations. Those who came from unaccommodating countries were
confined to lobbying in corridors or protesting in public spaces
but were not allowed access to the podium and official meeting rooms.
"We
can either be the next generation of leaders or the next generation
of statistics," said Naina Dhingra of the International Youth
Leadership Council.
"Every
minute, five people ages 15-24 contract HIV," added Marcela
Howell of Advocates for Youth.
UNAIDS,
the UN agency leading the world body's response to the deadly epidemic,
estimates that 10.3 million young people are living with HIV-AIDS,
out of a global total of some 36 million infected persons. Half
of all new cases of infection - more than 7,000 per day - occur
among young people.
UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his latest report on the epidemic,
said, "Working with young people is fundamental to an effective
response against HIV-AIDS."
"An
effective response involves a special focus on the needs of young
people," Annan's report stressed.
In
Howell's view, those words remain hollow. "The UN may talk
about young people and HIV, but youth still do not have a voice
that reflects both the impact this epidemic has on their age group
and the role they must play in determining how to effectively reach
their generation," she said.
"Unless
you have youth involved, you will never reach them," Howell
added. Her organisation specialises in adolescent sexual health
issues.
As
recently as May 22, only one country had appointed a youth representative
to its delegation for the special session: The Netherlands.
"It
was very disappointing that there were no youth at the PrepCom (Preparatory
Committee) for the AIDS special session held in May, ... other than
myself." said Jessica de Ruijter, the Dutch youth representative.
At
22 years of age, de Ruijter was the youngest person involved in
debating the draft declaration officials are expected to finalise
and adopt at the end of this week's talks. She represented the Dutch
Council on Youth and Population.
Over
the past month, five other countries named representatives younger
than 25 to their official delegations, Howell said. They were Cambodia,
Jamaica, Kenya, Senegal, and St Kitts and Nevis.
"This
is a good sign but is still nowhere near enough," de Ruijter
said. "We need to be actively involved in the decision making
processes that affect us."
More
than 3,000 participants registered for the special session and the
informal meetings held on its fringes - among them, politicians,
scientists, corporate executives, and non- governmental organisations.
By contrast, the number of young people with an official role to
play stood at six. (END/IPS)
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