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International News HIV/AIDS Spending Projected to Be Half of What Is Needed by 2005, UNAIDS Report SaysSeptember 22, 2003 Despite recent increases in funding to fight HIV/AIDS in Africa, anticipated spending on the disease will be about half of what is needed by 2005, according to a UNAIDS report released Sunday, the Washington Post reports. The report, titled "Accelerating Action Against AIDS in Africa," says that because some areas in Africa have made "significant strides" against the disease, "the challenge [of fighting AIDS], while daunting, is not insurmountable," according to the Post (Weiss, Washington Post, 9/22). The report was released at the opening of the 13th International Conference on AIDS & STIs in Africa, which is scheduled to run through Friday in Nairobi, Kenya (Xinhua News Agency, 9/20). While about $950 million was spent on the fight against HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa in 2002, up from $550 million in 2000, that amount was less than half the $2 billion needed for basic prevention and treatment services, according to the report. Those needs are expected to grow to $5 billion by 2005, and another $1 billion will be needed to provide antiretroviral medications, the report said. However, spending by that year is expected to amount to only $3 billion, including anticipated funding increases, according to the report. "There is still too much talking and not enough doing. ... In reality, our actions too often fall short of our loudly pronounced slogans and pledges," Michel Sidibe, director of country and regional support for UNAIDS, wrote in a statement released with the report (Washington Post, 9/22). Effective Programs Problems Persist Speaking at the opening of the conference, Stephen Lewis, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, said that the slow pace of Western countries in delivering money and programs to help fight AIDS in Africa, as well as the years of debating how to address the epidemic, was "morally unconscionable," the Boston Globe reports. "I'm enraged by the behavior of the rich powers, how much more grievous, by their neglect, they have made the situation in Africa," Lewis said, adding, "That isn't to take Africa off the hook: The behavior of many former African leaders was indefensible. But Africa has moved mountains in the last couple of years, while the Western world remains mired in the foothills." Lewis said that the $1 billion gap in spending on the AIDS pandemic at a time when the West has spent more than $200 billion in the last two years fighting terrorism is a "grotesque obscenity." Lewis asked how the West could spend so much money fighting terrorism but could not find a portion of that amount of money "to prevent children from living in terror?" (Donnelly, Boston Globe, 9/22). Back to other news for September 22, 2003
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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