Date: 09/10/2003
Source: The Presidency
Title: J Zuma: Health Forum, SA-Swedish Binational Commission
ADDRESS BY DEPUTY PRESIDENT JACOB ZUMA TO THE HEALTH FORUM OF THE
SOUTH AFRICA - SWEDEN BINATIONAL COMMISSION, Stockholm, Sweden, 9
October 2003
Madame Deputy Prime Minister,
Distinguished participants,
I am pleased that we have the opportunity to share ideas about how
we can best address the global spread of HIV, AIDS, tuberculosis,
and malaria.
This situation has created a worldwide crisis that required an
urgent global response. It also resulted in a new, global
public-private partnership that has led to strengthened
cooperation, increased coordination, and greater investments aimed
at these three diseases, with an overall goal of improving health
outcomes.
The statistics make us all see the need for intensified action. In
the year 2002, around the world:
* 3.1 million people died of AIDS; and
* Tuberculosis accounted for 2 million deaths.
We have come a long way since the G8 Summit in July 2000 where
leaders in Okinawa endorsed the international development targets
for HIV, AIDS and tuberculosis. The unprecedented momentum and
consensus to reduce the impact of HIV, AIDS and tuberculosis must
not be lost.
The epidemic poses one of the greatest challenges to Africa. 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.
It is a known fact that the epidemic tends to affect every
community.
It is also tearing hardest at society's margins, claiming lives,
destroying families and testing community compassion. HIV and AIDS
are also forcing communities to focus on much more complex societal
and moral issues such as violence, sexual abuse, death, children
orphaned by AIDS and others. We all know that Africa is severely
impacted by HIV, AIDS, TB, malaria and many other infectious
diseases.
We also know that poverty, underdevelopment, instability, war and
natural disaster have raged the continent for a long time.
Such conditions put more pressure on Africans to do more to put the
continent on the path to stability and development, free of
diseases and poverty.
As I said earlier, the challenges seem enormous and the truth is
that they are. However, what is exciting about all this is the fact
that we have the ability to respond successfully.
In the South African Government, we have gone far in putting key
programmes in place to respond to HIV, AIDS, STIs and TB.
Government, together with NGOs and CBOs developed the 5-year HIV
and AIDS and STI Strategic Plan for South Africa. The Plan is a
broad framework document designed to guide our country's response
to the challenges of HIV and AIDS.
It highlights four key priority areas for South Africa:
* Prevention.
* Treatment, care and support for those who are infected and
affected.
* Research, monitoring and surveillance in order to understand the
evolution of the epidemic.
* Human rights and legal issues.
Crucial to an effective country response was the allocation of more
resources for key interventions. Over the last four years, more
resources have been allocated to programmes, which are key to
policy formulation and to the development of policy guidelines
within government. Financial support for other key role-players
such as NGOs and CBOs has been increased through a number of
departments and other international donor agencies. The Department
of Health alone provides R45 million for NGO and CBO funding.
The Departments of Agriculture, Social Development and Health have
taken poverty alleviation to heart, and have in the last year
escalated efforts to address it. One such initiative is our
Integrated Food Security and Nutrition Programme that made R400
million available to provide relief to needy families, irrespective
of HIV status.
However, there is also a need to address poverty and nutrition for
those people with HIV, as there is an opportunity to slow their
progress to AIDS and increase the number of years that they remain
healthy and productive. Boosting the immune system has a drastic
impact on quality of life, and ensures that drugs taken to address
specific infections have optimal efficacy.
Addressing poverty and nutrition can happen at a multitude of
levels - and one of those is through the provision of nutritional
supplements and food parcels.
Preventing further infections is another critical area of response.
The provision of free condoms and the provision of information and
education through formal and informal channels are also some of the
key strategies fully funded by the Government. Research in the area
of vaccine development is ongoing through financial support from
government and other private institutions.
However, whereas the national government is responsible for broad
policy and guidance, we also depend on organisations at local level
for implementation.
It is only through mobilising the resources of local government,
business, faith-based organisations, traditional leaders and other
stakeholders towards the specific needs of a community that success
can be ensured.
We have a strong partnership against AIDS, through the South
African National AIDS Council, which co-ordinates the work of the
various sectors.
The national government can set the policy framework, but can never
know the skills and resources available in individual communities.
This is particularly important as our country finalises its
comprehensive treatment and care plan for people with HIV and AIDS.
This is also important in the social and economic context where
such interventions will have to be undertaken.
Our struggle with the TB epidemic clearly outlines the necessity to
engage communities and sectors much more vigorously in sharing the
responsibility to turn the tide against HIV and AIDS.
On the research front, the South African National AIDS Vaccine
Initiative is now embarking on the first phase of clinical trials
and we are strengthening our Indigenous Knowledge Systems through
our medical research council.
Moving to the co-operative relationship established and nurtured
between South Africa and Sweden, I would like to allude briefly to
the status of our bilateral health co-operation.
This afternoon's seminar is arranged as part of the South
African-Swedish Binational Commission and the recently established
Health Forum between the public health authorities of our two
countries.
In the Health Forum's first meeting in Pretoria it was decided to
expand co-operation on five themes:
* HIV and AIDS, TB and other communicable diseases,
* Reproductive health and rights,
* Health sector reform,
* Health promotion and health impact assessment
* Injury prevention.
We are today concentrating on three more specific areas and I
therefore want to urge each representative gathered here at the
Forum to ensure that the following three cornerstones are added and
adhered to:
* Ensure that there is a geographical balance. We should invest in
those areas already affected by HIV, AIDS, TB and malaria and
invest in areas which have high vulnerability.
* There should be a balance across the diseases with which we are
mandated. No doubt HIV and AIDS will continue to take the lion's
share, and rightly so. But we will also invest in others, such as
tuberculosis and malaria.
* A balance in the interventions is crucial for all three diseases.
We should look at securing more funding for prevention, treatment;
care and support, ongoing research, monitoring and evaluation. We
also need to look at ways and means to ensure that human rights and
legal issues are addressed throughout the programmes.
With that in mind, it gives me great pleasure to declare this
seminar open, and may your deliberations be added to those positive
outcomes already registered under the rubric of the BNC and the BNC
Health Forum.
I wish all the representatives the wisdom, foresight, commitment
and perseverance to succeed in the formidable task ahead of
you.
I thank you.
Issued by The Presidency, 9 October 2003 Source: SAPA
|