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Asia-Pacific moving "too late and too slow" in fight against HIV/AIDS
October 20, 2004
Manila - Asia-Pacific risks an AIDS crisis similar in scale to Africa's unless
governments across the region step up efforts to combat the spread of the
disease, the United Nations is warning.
Both the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) "need to get the action much accelerated,"
said Kathleen Cravero, deputy executive director of the UN agency battling the
spread of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
She told a forum in the Philippine capital that the ASEAN regoin "had made good
progress in the last couple of years but like most of Asia, it is moving too
late and too slow."
"The time is now for regional institutions to step up and accelerate their
action at a regional level and with individual countries," Cravero said.
"We believe the economic, political and regional institutions in Asia have a
great responsibility now because Asia has a window of opportunity to make sure
an AIDS epidemic never takes hold ... as it did in Africa," Cravero said.
She called on these institutions to provide resources to individual countries
to deal with AIDS and for the national leaders to take a role in combating the
spread of the virus.
"Those (APEC) leaders should stand up, these leaders should be promoting strong
advocacy, knowledge and awareness," at their annual summits, she added.
Cravero praised the Asian Development Bank (ADB) for allocating funds to help
in controlling AIDS, an incurable disease caused by the Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV) that kills by weakening the body's immune system.
ASEAN includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
APEC includes most of these countries as well as Australia, Canada, Chile,
China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New
Guinea, Peru, Russia, Taiwan and the United States.
A study by the Manila-based ADB and UNAIDS, said that there were over seven
million people infected with the virus in the Asia-Pacific region with half a
million dying of the disease each year.
A total of 10 million people in the Asia-Pacific region will be newly-infected
by the disease between 2004 and 2010 and the annual death toll will rise by
over 750,000 by 2010, the study added,
Cravero also warned the Philippines not to be complacent despite the low AIDS
prevalence in this country, saying there were many factors here that could lead
to its rapid spread.
There was low condom use, a widely dispersed sex industry, high population
mobility, high rates of sexually-transmitted infections, many young people
engaged in risky behaviour, drug users shared injecting equipment, and the
general public lacked knowledge of AIDS, she said.
There have been only 2,139 cases of AIDS infection recorded in the Philippines
but experts believe there are about 10,000 Filipinos who are actually infected
with the virus.
The anti-AIDS campaign in the Philippines has been hampered by the dominant
Roman Catholic church which has opposed government programs to distribute
condoms.
Jean-Marc Olive, chair of a UN group on AIDS, warned that "AIDS all over Asia
is rising at a very alarming rate and the Philippines cannot be protected" by
its belief it is different from other countries.
He said it was "difficult to promote condom use in an open way" in the
Philippines where President Gloria Arroyo has been reluctant to anger the
church which disallows the use of contraceptives like condoms.
But he said political commitment could overcome such cultural barriers, citing
the example of Mexico, a Catholic country where the government carried out an
active anti-AIDS campaign.
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