“Rock in Rio Lisbon – For a better World Forum”
We are certainly in the right place today to talk about HIV and
AIDS, because HIV/AIDS is a normal sexual transmitted
desease and sex is an issue expecially for young people.
We need to start by personalising the risk and the impact of
AIDS. AIDS is not someone else’s issue, it is my issue and it is
your issue. Africa may be the hardest hit continent at the
moment, but in this globalised world what happens to our
brothers and sisters on another continent of the same Global
Village also affects our world close to home. SARS made the
world see just how interconnected we are. There is no way
forward but to care for each other. That means first of all 3
A new way of thinking about access to treatment. Just a
few years ago it seemed acceptable to most of the world that
only the affluent - a small percentage of the world’s
population – had access to treatment. Drug companies
catered to that market, and this was considered “normal”. It
is totally unacceptable that most people have no access to
treatment, while drug companies make record profits. The
90% of available resources are spent for the 10% of affected
people, while the 90% of people in need has only the 10% of
resources. And this is a sentence to death for millions of
people. Our world deserves a better and more humane
system than that. These days the idea has taken hold that
everyone should have access to treatment. We must do all we
can to make sure this idea becomes well established, and a
reality. Countries need to cherish the capacity the TRIPS
agreement has given them to protect the public health, and
not sign this away in free trade agreements.
You all know the close relashionship among intravenous drug
use and the spread of HIV. It is in everibody interest:
A humane approach to drug users. Drug users who cannot
stop with their addiction need real alternatives like
methadone. Yet this treatment is still illegal in some
countries. Brutality through “war” on drug users is no
substitute for care. The violent approach to drugs has been
tried since 1909, and it has failed. In many parts of the world
the fight against drugs has become the fight against drug
users. Politicians exploit the communities’ fear about drug
users – as my Australian friend Alex Wodak, President,
International Harm Reduction Association said recently in
Melbourne: “prohibitionist policies are political viagra for
politicians with fading electoral potency”. The humanitarian
of the world have to say, “enough”.
We must ask for new strategy based on scientific evidence and
The evidence that harm reduction works has to be followed, which means opening needle and syringe
exchanges, and substitutive therapies for all in need and not
just a few . This saves not only those who would share
needles from transmission of HIV, but also prevents the
epidemic taking hold in the broader population. Drug users
are not an epidemiologically closed group, but they are open
to many people through sexual activity. If we prevent a drug
user to become HIV positive, we prevent many others to be
infected. Leaders who fail to explain to the community why
such programmes make sense are just not doing their job. We
as humanitarians need to call them to account for this failure
Being frank about sexuality. Some leaders irresponsibly
oppose condom use, and some even spread falsehoods about
the effectiveness of condoms. Surely we all agree, and in any
case I agree, that abstinence is the best way to prevent a
sexual transmitted disease !. But people have sex! The point
is: are we able to effectively protect our health and care for
each other? As the Swedish government said at the recent
World Health Assembly, “we need to avoid digging ourselves
further into our moral trenches”. Young people need adults
who are not afraid of the facts of life, so that life can be lived
In partnership with the Global Network of People Living with
HIV/AIDS, the Red Cross Red Crescent has a global anti-stigma
campaign, with the signature line “The truth about AIDS. Pass
it on….”. This sums up what I am saying here. Rather than
tolerate myths and hatred, let’s face the facts and act on them
with robust humanitarian spirit. “Pass it on…” is the Red
Cross Red Crescent way of saying “talk with others, especially
the marginalised and excluded, the most vulnerable people, and
mobilise your community to action”. We can act on what we
hear today. As Josephine Chiturumani, a woman living with
HIV from Zimbabwe Red Cross has said, “That power of
humanity we have, let’s use it!”. Red Cross and Red Crescent
International Mouvement calls personally each of you to action.
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