UN to end HIV/AIDS scourge by 2030
Ban-Ki moon |
Ahead of the 2016 World AIDS Day, outgoing UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon has said that the organisation is working toward ending the AIDS
scourge by 2030.
“The United Nations is working worldwide to end AIDS by 2030,” Ban
said on Monday in New York in his message for World AIDS Day, observed
on Dec. 1.
Ban said 35 years since the emergence of AIDS, the international community could look back with some pride.
He, however, said the global community must look ahead with resolve
and commitment to reach the goal of ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030.
“There has been real progress in tackling the disease. More people
than ever are on treatment. Since 2010, the number of children infected
through mother‑to‑child transmission has dropped by half.
“Fewer people die of AIDS‑related causes each year. And people living with HIV are living longer lives,” he said.
According to him, the number of people with access to life-saving
medicines has doubled over the past five years, now topping 18 million.
“With the right investments, the world can get on the fast-track to
achieve our target of 30 million people on treatment by 2030.
“Access to HIV medicines to prevent mother‑to‑child transmission is now available to more than 75 per cent of those in need.”
The UN chief noted that while there was clear progress, gains remained fragile.
“Young women are especially vulnerable in countries with high HIV
prevalence, especially in sub‑Saharan Africa. Key populations continue
to be disproportionately affected by HIV.
“New infections are on the rise among people who inject drugs as well as gay men and other men who have sex with men,” he said.
Ban also said that AIDS epidemic was increasing in Eastern Europe and
Central Asia, fuelled by stigma, discrimination and punitive laws.
Globally, people who are economically disadvantaged lack access to services and care, he said.
The secretary-general explained that criminalisation and
discrimination fostered new infections each day adding that women and
girls were still hard hit.
“The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was adopted with a promise to leave no one behind.
“Nowhere is this more important than in tackling AIDS. Supporting
young, vulnerable and marginalised people will change the course of the
epidemic.
“The UNAIDS strategic framework is aligned with the Sustainable
Development Goals, which highlight how the work against HIV is linked to
progress in education, peace, gender equality and human rights,’’ he
said.
Ban recalled that during its first decade, affected groups refused to
accept inaction, mediocrity and weakness in the AIDS response.
“Their courage drove progress on securing women and children’s
health, lowering the costs of lifesaving drugs and giving voice to the
voiceless. We must all join together in that same uncompromising spirit.
“On World AIDS Day, I salute the tireless effort of leaders, civil
society, colleagues in the United Nations and the private sector to
advance this cause.
“As I prepare to complete my tenure as Secretary-General, I issue a
strong call to all: let us recommit, together, to realising our vision
of a world free of AIDS,” Ban said.
NAN
Comments
Post a Comment