NAIROBI, 4 July (IRIN) -
Stressing that leadership was imperative in confronting the spread of the
epidemic, Mkapa said his government was committed to promoting prevention
efforts and caring for patients and orphans seeking treatment.
The Tanzanian government has embarked on a major public education campaign
involving religious leaders, youth and community groups, to tackle the
problems associated with fear and ignorance of the disease. "We have been
quite open with religious leaders - asking them to help us out in
generating awareness of the danger of HIV/AIDS," Mkapa told journalists in
New York last week. "The government has been encouraging people to go for
testing."
In addition to prevention and treatment, the head of the Tanzania
Commission for AIDS has been exploring ways to develop partnerships with
regional and international AIDS research groups for the development of an
AIDS vaccine, based on sub-types of the HIV virus prevalent in the region.
Tanzania was addressing poverty, which was a risk factor for and a result
of HIV/AIDS, through a macroeconomic reform programme in place over the
past five years, Mkapa said. "Under these reforms, Tanzania's economy has
started to grow," he said. "It attained a 4.5 percent growth rate last
year and should reach 8 percent by the year 2004."
The AIDS pandemic was undermining the economies of the hardest-hit
countries and reversing gains in reducing poverty, the UNDP warned last
week in a new report, "HIV/AIDS: Implications for Poverty Reduction".
Some countries could see their GNP shrink by up to 40 percent within 20
years, jeopardising UN targets to halve poverty by 2015, according to the
report. The report was the focus of a panel, chaired by UNDP Administrator
Mark Malloch Brown yesterday, at the UN General Assembly special session
on HIV/AIDS in New York.
"The evidence from household surveys in hard-hit countries shows that when
a breadwinner dies from HIV/AIDS, the household income falls by 50 percent
to 80 percent, pushing families deeper into poverty," said Brown. The loss
of productive labour was cutting these countries' GNP by up to 2 percent
per year, he said. "Action is needed to protect hard-won gains in reducing
poverty from the toll of HIV/AIDS," he added.
The joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS, has estimated that about 8
percent of Tanzanian teenagers and adults (15 to 49 years) are infected
with HIV. "Although this rate is less than the hardest-hit countries in
southern Africa, Tanzania still faces a great challenge in efforts to stem
the epidemic," according to the UNDP.
Reverend Gideon Byamugisha of Uganda said at the UN General Assembly
session last week that while the HIV/AIDS epidemic was now on the global
agenda, good intentions had not been matched by allocation of resources at
the national and international levels, and that poverty reduction was
being undermined by both HIV/AIDS, and unfavourable terms of international
trade.
"AIDS is not just a disease. It is a symptom of the way we relate to each
other in the global village: it represents injustice, inequality and
marginalisation," he said. Given the epidemic, "should we be asking for
debt reduction or debt cancellation for poor countries?" Byamugisha asked.
ILO Director-General Juan Somavia said the link between AIDS and poverty
was clear. The main linkage was the impact on women, with the feminisation
of poverty, he said. "We also see that the crisis of 13 million children
orphaned by AIDS also intensifies the problem of child labour," Somavia
added.
Back in the Tanzanian capital, Dar es Salaam, on 30 June, Mkapa said his
government planned to make anti-retroviral drugs available to all
Tanzania's estimated three million HIV/AIDS patients, and needed US $1
billion a year to fight the HIV/AIDS epidemic. "This is a very heavy
burden for us, because the amount is equivalent to the government's annual
revenue collection," the BBC quoted him as saying.
Mkapa urged other African countries, as well as pharmaceutical companies,
to step up efforts to stop the spread of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. "We must
now rise up to the challenge and [take] collective responsibility for
saving ourselves and our society from imminent extinction," he added. [For
other IRIN reports on HIV/AIDS, go to 'Plus News' at:
http://www.reliefweb.int/IRIN/hiv_aids/hivfp.phtml]
[ENDS]
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Keyword: HIV