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The
top United Nations envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa said today that
his recent two-week tour of the southern part of the continent had
reinforced his fundamental conviction that a concerted effort
between the African people and the international community can
defeat the deadly disease.
"No matter how terrible the scourge of AIDS, no matter how limited
the capacity to respond, no matter how devastating the human toll,
it is absolutely certain that the pandemic can be turned around
with a joint and Herculean effort between the African countries
themselves and the international community," Stephen Lewis, the
Secretary-General's Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, told the
press in New York.
Mr. Lewis said that at every stop on his four-country visit -
Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Zambia - he had been struck by the
progress that had been made and the determination with which the
African people and their governments were prepared to do battle
against the terrible disease.
The Special Envoy said that he was weary to the point of
"exasperated intolerance" of those who would question Africa's
resolve, and stressed that even in the most extreme circumstances -
such as those in the four nations he visited - Africans were
engaged in endless initiatives and programmes, which if generalized
throughout the continent, would halt the pandemic and prolong and
save the lives of millions.
Still, the scale of the catastrophe demanded massive resources, Mr.
Lewis said, adding that his country visits had driven home how
crucial it was for the wider international community to actively
and aggressively support the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria. "It is impossible to overstate how
strongly people feel that the Global Fund is the best vehicle we
have to finance the struggle against the pandemic," he said.
"The Global Fund, at the end of January, can be said to be in
crisis," Mr. Lewis said, noting that it was legitimate to question
the reticence of the rich countries and why they were willing to
jeopardize the integrity of the most hopeful financial instrument
available to combat the most cruel disease humankind had ever
faced. Characterizing the paucity of available resources and
seeming lack of interest in the breadth of the devastation as "mass
murder by complacency," Mr. Lewis said the time for polite
entreaties was over.
"People living with HIV/AIDS are in a race against time," he said.
"The pandemic cannot be allowed to continue, and those who watch it
unfold with a kind of pathological equanimity must be held to
account." He observed that there might yet come a day when a
peacetime tribunal would be created to deal with this particular
type of crime against humanity - UN News.