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Date
: 03/08/2003
Source: The Presidency
Title: J Zuma: Opening of South African AIDS Conference
ADDRESS BY DEPUTY PRESIDENT JACOB ZUMA ON THE OCCASION OF THE
OPENING OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN AIDS CONFERENCE, ICC, Durban, 3 August
2003
The Convenors of the South African AIDS Conference, Professors
Coovadia and Prof Abdool-Karim,
Ms Gravero, Executive Deputy Director of UNAIDS,
Members of Parliament and Legislative assemblies,
Mayors,
South African National AIDS Council members,
People living with HIV, AIDS, and TB
Community and business leaders,
Representatives of non-governmental organisations and
community-based organisations,
Esteemed guests:
I am deeply honoured to be able to join you today at the opening of
the South African AIDS Conference, on behalf of the South African
Government and as Chairperson of the South African National AIDS
Council.
This is a crucial conference, given the challenge that we face in
our country and the continent. It compels our attention and demands
our response.
The disease continues to cause devastation, and it exposes the
inequality between rich and poor, and between men and women.
The challenge lies in powerful and continuous action to prevent new
infections and to provide care and support for the many who are
infected or affected.
Many of those being infected are from the most vulnerable people in
society, but increasingly many within the middle class.
The continent, SADC region and South Africa in particular have
mounted a huge response to the epidemic.
In South Africa, our ability to respond effectively has been
hampered in the main by the negative legacy left by the apartheid
regime.
We are faced with huge capacity challenges, poor health and
education infrastructure in many parts of the country, and that is
our reality, which we must bear in mind as we respond to this huge
challenge.
The challenges, which face this new democracy, often raise serious
ethical and human rights questions:
* What do governments owe their citizens who are ill in terms of
provision of health care and other social support?
* How should the needs of those with HIV infection be balanced
against the needs of those with other life threatening
diseases?
* When resources are insufficient, is it acceptable for some to
benefit and not others? If so, how should such selection be
made?
Each of the above questions present decision makers with difficult
choices and they may require difficult trade-offs.
Each of us has different values, interests and responsibilities but
our common objective must be to improve the lives of the poorest of
the poor in our country.
I believe that there are six key ways in overcoming these
challenges:
* Political leadership;
* Mobilising the many communities of South Africa;
* Finding effective scientific solutions;
* Resourcing the response of HIV and AIDS;
* Preventing stigma; and
* The establishment of partnerships by all stakeholders.
At this national platform I would like to reiterate what we never
questioned the existence of HIV and AIDS. We are only trying to
understand the causal factors beyond the virus. HIV and AIDS are
regarded as a national priority. Government involvement is a
product of political will and practical capacity.
We developed a comprehensive five-year strategic plan to address
HIV, AIDS and STIs in 2000. To plan five years ahead, we needed a
vision not only of where the epidemic will likely be, and where we
as government needs to be, but also where the response in
communities and sectors should be if we are to change the course of
the epidemic.
Secondly, we need to continue to mobilise the many communities of
South Africa
We are fortunate to have a very strong and vocal civil society
response to HIV and AIDS. NGOs and CBOs have gone a long way in the
last few years to ensure that people living with HIV and AIDS have
access to services, thereby complementing the work of
government.
However, whereas the national government is responsible for broad
policy and guidance, it is critical that stakeholders at local
level plan jointly to address common problems. It is only through
mobilising the resources of local government, business, faith-based
organisations, traditional leaders and healers and other
stakeholders towards the specific needs of a community that success
can be ensured.
The national government can set the policy framework, but can never
know the skills and resources available in individual
communities.
Non-government actors include large corporations that can do so
much more to show leadership by providing effective services to
their workforces and the families of their workforces, right
through to small traders and little shops as you find in every
village and community. All these actors must be mobilised.
Thirdly, we need to continue to find effective scientific
solutions.
I am proud to say that South African researchers have done a lot of
scientific research - and we have made a lot of progress in
understanding the epidemic, but we are still seeking ways of
effectively containing its spread.
That is why our research efforts are ongoing, as we cannot rest
until we are able to make a meaningful impact.
Ladies and Gentlemen, some people sometimes feel that the
Government is not caring for people that are infected with HIV and
AIDS by not providing them with antiretroviral therapy. We are in
the process of finalising several international agreements that
will ensure access to medication to the many people infected with
HIV and AIDS.
We also strongly believe that we need to ensure that necessary
infrastructure is in place, including laboratory support, adherence
to drug therapy, and social structures and services that support
this intervention.
The fourth response is the provision of resources for HIV and AIDS
programmes.
We recognise the importance of eradicating poverty to combat the
spread of HIV, as well as the impact of poverty on people already
infected with HIV.
Plans to prevent and treat HIV must be complemented by plans to
alleviate and eradicate poverty, including building the economy,
creating jobs, improving access to clean water, better housing and
sanitation, access to improved nutrition, welfare grants and other
development measures.
In the current Medium Term Expenditure Framework period of 2003/4
to 2005/6, National Treasury has set aside R3.3 billion in the
fight against HIV and AIDS. These funds are to be channelled to
Health, Education and Social Development. A significant portion is
to be provided as part of the conditional grant system, with R2
billion of this made available as part of the equitable share to
strengthen the health system in provinces.
The equitable share is the major source of health funding to the
provinces, and in the next MTEF period this amount is increased to
cater for specific HIV, AIDS and TB spending.
In the coming year we can expect even further increases, with
funding from the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, the
Bill Clinton Foundation and the US Emergency Fund.
But as the resources to address AIDS grow, it will be also vital to
ensure that we can show results and ensure accountability.
Otherwise, these resources will not be sustainable.
When speaking about money, I always see a coin, but a coin with two
sides: one side is the monetary value, the other side is the people
and the institutions. We have to invest in both.
Financial resources speak for themselves: investing in AIDS
prevention and treatment today means saving millions of lives
tomorrow, preserving societal stability, and ensuring economic
prosperity.
The fifth element is the prevention of stigma. We must keep stigma
and discrimination uppermost in our thoughts as we tackle the
unwarranted and unreasonable stigma that is attached to HIV. Stigma
kills. Often society kills people living with HIV before the virus
kills them. Let's not forget that.
Just as the government has helped to bring down the historic
barriers of apartheid, so too, people living with HIV must be
afforded protection and dignity.
The outcomes that are required for success are clear:
* The application of proven leadership from all of us in government
and civil society will slow the spread of the epidemic;
* The extension of access to care and treatment will lessen the
impact of the epidemic on individuals and the nation; and
* The extension of ongoing scientific research will reduce the
vulnerability of those infected and affected
I would like to once again pledge the commitment of the whole
government of South Africa, from the national, provincial
government to the local authorities as well as my personal
commitment to fully implement HIV and AIDS prevention, care and
support programmes in every province, every district and every
community.
The pharmaceutical industry must keep its promise to make AIDS
drugs available to developing countries at affordable prices.
Scientists must continue to work where the real needs are, not just
where the funding and credit lies. They should continue their
search for an AIDS vaccine.
Civil society leaders must be uncompromising advocates for all
their constituencies, not just the elite few.
Together we can do something about this epidemic, we are not
powerless. If we, in this conference do not believe that we can
stop this epidemic, then who will?
All of us at this conference need to strategise, to think through
what we can do to make a difference, in our community, in our
country. And then, once we have the resolutions, do not think you
can do it in isolation: find partners, join forces, seek support
and form alliances.
We must resist all attempts to have our priorities determined by
those who do not have an understanding of what our vision is. I
often say that having come so far, how can anyone believe that we
will desert our country and the people in the face of such a
threat.
This conference must rise to the challenge to bring government and
civil society together; to create a powerful AIDS movement
extending beyond the achievements of the past; and to turn the
focus to the places where HIV and AIDS persist.
In conclusion, I would like to emphasise and assure you that as
government we have done our level best to attend to the HIV and
AIDS challenge, and that we will continue to do so. Another one of
the evidence of our hard work is that the awareness level on HIV
and AIDS among South Africans has exceeded 90%. The bigger
challenge is: What do we do with regard to changing our
behaviour?
I wish you success in achieving the goals of your conference.
I thank you.
For more information contact Lakela Kaunda at 0827822575 or Zanele
Mngadi at 0827819332.