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HEALTH:
African Groups Disappointed by UN AIDS Declaration
By
Lewis Machipisa
UNITED
NATIONS, Jun 27 (IPS) - African civil society groups packed their
bags Wednesday to return home distressed that commitments made at
this week's UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV- AIDS would
amount to mere rhetoric.
While
pleased by the renewed commitment to fight the global pandemic,
Moustapha Gueye, director of the African Council of AIDS Services
Organisations (AFRICASO) said he was returning to Senegal worried.
''All
governments must be held accountable," he said, or they would
take advantage of the fact that the declaration they adopted Wednesday
is legally non-binding.
The
declaration contains a number of goals to which signatories are
expected to aspire. It calls on them to reduce HIV prevalence among
people 15 to 24 years old by 25 percent in the next four years;
to halve the incidence of infection among infants by 2010; and to
draw up plans for comprehensive health programmes by 2003.
It
also urges governments, "without further delay'', to implement
the Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) debt-relief initiative
and agree to cancel all bilateral claims against the poorest nations,
particularly those affected by HIV-AIDS.
In
return, those countries would commit to use the debt relief to finance
poverty eradication programmes and HIV-AIDS prevention, treatment,
and support efforts.
The
declaration also urges wealthy countries to increase development
assistance to poorer ones that increase national anti- AIDS funding.
Gueye,
however, said the document was ''weak on its links to agreed international
development targets, and it is questionable how these targets will
be achieved without explicit commitments and actions.'' Other advocates
and activists echoed this sentiment.
Gueye
said he had every reason to be concerned. Many Africa countries
have strategies to deal with the disease, he said, but lack the
resources to make a serious impact. This would not have been the
case, he argued, had donor countries honoured a UN commitment -
made more than 30 years ago - to raise development assistance spending
to 0.7 percent of Gross National Product.
Rich
countries have repeatedly reiterated that promise, he added, but
aid levels have continued to decline.
This
time around, Gueye stressed, civil society groups should develop
and enforce a comprehensive plan to hold governments' feet to the
fire. ''Otherwise, nobody will be held accountable,'' he said.
International
funds committed to the fight against HIV-AIDS should be managed
by "a committee to be set up outside the existing UN structure
and not linked to international financial institutions," he
added. "This committee should be made up of representatives
of countries commensurate with the burden of the disease borne by
the countries and (it should) involve civil society." Alhough
the UN special session came ''20 years too late" because in
that period an officially estimated 22 million have died of AIDS,
Gueye said, "I was very proud to see that our African leaders
came and (were true to) consensus in the home countries.'' Heads
of states from Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Mali, Mauritius,
Nigeria, Tanzania, Rwanda, Senegal and Swaziland attended the meeting.
Their
participation, said UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, shows that
the world is now waking up to the deadly disease. By the end of
last year, 36.1 million people worldwide were living with HIV- AIDS,
90 percent of them in developing countries and 75 percent in sub-Saharan
Africa.
''I
hope this level of commitment will spread to Asia where infection
rates are increasing,'' Annan said. Not a single head of state from
Asia attended the conference.
''After
today, we should have a document setting up a clear battle plan.
It is a fight that everyone must be involved in. It is a fight we
can't afford to lose,'' Annan said after the talks ended Wednesday.
Also
Wednesday, the Security Council nominated Annan to a second term
in office. The UN chief pledged to do more to fight HIV-AIDS and
stressed the need to work closely with civil society groups. ''We
are moving in the right direction,'' he said.
Much
of Annan's effort in coming months likely would be devoted to raising
funds for his global AIDS fund. He said this would require between
seven billion and 10 billion dollars per year but so far, only one
billion dollars has been pledged.
Gueye
said he appreciated that HIV-AIDS affects all regions of the world
but he would have wanted to see the creation of a health fund specifically
for Africa "because we are the region most affected. What this
conference has achieved is to dilute Africa within the global vision.''
Despite official expressions of solidarity with non-governmental
organisations, he added, "we are deeply concerned that the
grassroots experiences in Africa have not strategically informed
the global process that has led to this (week's talks) and yet processes
such as this affect the lives of millions of Africans, who are either
living with HIV-AIDS or are affected or vulnerable.'' Tanzanian
President Benjamin Mkapa welcomed Wednesday's declaration. ''We
support the global fund," he said. "We support it fully.
But we think the amounts can be increased. We must continue pleading
and arguing our case and hope we get more resources.''
Annan
struck a similar chord. Citing figures from Harvard University,
he said that South Africa alone will lose 22 billion dollars in
national output by 2010 because of AIDS. In Zambia, employers will
spend he equivalent of one-fifth of the nation's wage bill on AIDS-related
expenses. (END/IPS)
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