South Africa's former Deputy President Jacob Zuma called on the
government to increase access to AIDS drugs and dispel perceptions
that it was promoting nutritional supplements as an alternative to
treatment.
An estimated 5,5-million South Africans, or one in nine, are
infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, according to
government figures. Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang has
urged AIDS sufferers to eat more beetroot and garlic to strengthen
their immune systems and has backed the use of traditional
medicines to help combat the disease.
“We cannot afford any mixed messages or ambiguity when it
comes to the scourge of HIV and Aids,” Zuma told a labor
union conference in Midrand near Johannesburg today. "We must
ensure that we support calls to ensure that such treatment is
accessible and to monitor its correct distribution.''
The government on May 17 said about 134 000 AIDS sufferers had
applied for treatment at state-owned health-care facilities and a
further 80 000 at private hospitals. The Actuarial Society of South
Africa estimates more than a half million are so sick they need
treatment.
Zuma has been trying to resurrect his political career since being
fired by President Thabo Mbeki on June 2 last year, after a court
found that his political adviser Schabir Shaik tried to secure
bribes on his behalf. Zuma has been charged with two counts of
corruption and his trial is due to resume on Sept. 5.
Subsequent to being fired, Zuma was also charged with - and
acquitted of -- raping an HIV-positive family friend half his age.
Zuma testified they had had consensual sex without a condom and he
showered afterward to minimize his chances of becoming
infected.
“Being faithful, and the use of condoms and practicing safe
and protected sex should be central message that we send to our
people,” Zuma said today.
South Africa's ruling African National Congress defended the
country's strategy to combat AIDS, saying it had insufficient
resources to implement programs similar to those in richer nations,
with lower infection rates.
“Adopting a model which focuses exclusively on
anti-retroviral therapy would not solve our problem,” it said
in a article published on its Internet site today. “We said
that since there is still no cure or effective vaccine for HIV and
AIDS, let us focus on the first element of our
response.”
Free AIDS drug are available at 231 hospitals and clinics in 71% of
the country's municipalities, the party said.
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