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Ex-official implicates two Chinese leaders in AIDS scandal

South Africa's anti-AIDS drugs reach a million people
Driefontein, South Africa (AFP) Dec 1, 2010 - A million people are now receiving anti-AIDS drugs in South Africa, a country with the world's heaviest HIV infections, Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe said on Wednesday. "More than 200 000 new patients have been initiated on ARV's since April this year, bringing a total number to one million," Motlanthe told a public gathering to mark World AIDS Day in the eastern province of Mpumalanga. Motlanthe said more public health institutions were now providing treatment, with more nurses trained to administer ARV (anti-retroviral) drugs. "It is important to emphasize that even as we continue to make headway with our treatment programme, prevention remains the mainstay of our response to the dual epidemic of HIV and TB," he said. South Africa has 5.6 million people who are HIV-positive out of a 50-million population, according to UN estimates. The country, after long failing to tackle the problem amid scepticism about its cause, also has the largest ARV programme in the world.

Motlanthe and Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi started the day by visiting impoverished rural households affected by AIDS. "What we are observing here is the devastation of HIV/AIDS. All four houses we visited here were headed by grandmothers who are looking after orphans," said Motsoaledi. "What is left for us is to see how we pick up the pieces," he added. According to the government annual report, South African has 1.95 million AIDS orphans, while an estimated 314,000 people died of the disease in 2009. The impact of HIV in the country is compounded by poverty, as many people battle to feed themselves and adhere to the drug regimen. Others live far from institutions offering medical help.

Dozens of public gatherings to mark the day were held around the country by labour unions, church groups and civil society, signifying an increased effort to fight the scourge. In South Africa's oldest township Langa, northeast of Cape Town, a roadside testing station was set up outside a health clinic and a loud hailer urged passers-by to get tested. "I want to see what is happening inside my body," said a 56-year-old woman, being tested for the first time. After coming out she announced "I am clean. I am happy". This year's theme was "We are Responsible", with school children and adults encouraged to get tested and stop the spread of HIV. President Jacob Zuma's administration has been praised for implementing new approaches to fighting HIV after years of denialism by former president Thabo Mbeki and his health minister. Mbeki's government questioned the link between HIV and AIDS and the health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang promoted garlic and beetroot instead of medication.

The current government has set up a drive to test 15 million people by the end of June 2011 and provide anti-AIDS drugs to 80 percent of those who need treatment. Motsoaledi said last month the test campaign had lagged because of the football World Cup hosted by South Africa and a three-week public sector strike which crippled services at state hospitals. He said more than 4.6 million people had tested, of whom 800,000 were HIV positive. "What is important is that they have the knowledge to stop infecting their partners by sticking to one partner and always using a condom, adopting positive living and have access to treatment early," said Motsoaledi. Earlier this year, Zuma underwent an HIV test and publicly announced his negative result.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 1, 2010
A retired senior Chinese health official on Wednesday called for two of the country's most powerful leaders to take responsibility for a huge 1990s blood-selling AIDS scandal.

Chen Bingzhong, 78, who has advanced liver cancer, wrote an open letter to Chinese President Hu Jintao saying that some involved in the scandal in Henan province were guilty of "gross negligence" and had still not been punished.

In the letter, published on the website of activist group Aizhixing, the former head of the government's Institute of Health Education pinpoints "two senior officials" who have since entered China's top nine-member leadership.

Speaking to AFP by telephone on Wednesday, World AIDS Day, Chen pointed the finger at Vice-Premier Li Keqiang -- widely touted to succeed Premier Wen Jiabao -- who was head of Henan in central China from 2002 to 2004.

He also named Li Changchun, the Communist Party's propaganda chief, who served in the same position from 1992 to 1998.

Both are now part of the party's politburo standing committee, the nation's highest and most powerful decision-making body, along with Hu and Wen.

"They have to take responsibility. They must apologise," Chen said.

In the 1990s, entire villages in Henan were devastated by HIV/AIDS.

Many people were infected after repeatedly selling their blood to collection stations that pooled it into a tub and then injected it back into them after taking the plasma.

The blood-selling scandal was initially covered up by local officials, some of whom were actively involved. But it eventually came to light after fierce campaigning by activists -- including Aizhixing founder Wan Yanhai.

The government eventually revealed in 2001 that 30,000 to 50,000 people may have been infected with HIV through the scheme. Chen, though, said the number was closer to 100,000, adding at least 10,000 had died.

The Chinese government has since started talking more openly about HIV prevention and control, but the harassment of some independent campaigners and organisations still continues.

Wan fled to the United States this year with his family because he said he feared for his safety. Gao Yaojie, another AIDS activist who was based in Henan, left in 2009.

According to a state media report earlier this week, the number of HIV/AIDS sufferers in China now stands at nearly 370,400, compared with an official health ministry figure of 319,877 last year.

The report by China's state television also said the number of reported AIDS deaths in the nation had jumped by nearly 20,000 since the official estimate. The health ministry was not immediately available for comment.

In his letter, Chen compared Henan's blood incident with an HIV scandal in France in the 1980s that saw thousands transfused with blood contaminated by the virus that causes AIDS.

The incident caused huge concern and led to the prosecution of several officials including the then health minister.

"In comparison, Henan's blood scandal was much more serious than France's," Chen wrote in the letter.

"But not only were no investigations launched against those responsible, particularly the two officials who now occupy China's highest decision-making levels, but they were even entrusted with big responsibilities."

Chen told AFP he was scared about the potential consequences of his accusations in a country that tolerates very little criticism of its top leaders, but added it was his responsibility as a former health official.

"I'm risking a lot, but if I don't disclose this, I will not have a peaceful conscience," he said.

"I'm not going to live much longer, and if I bring this with me to my coffin, what a pity. I'm doing this to plead for the victims, to speak on their behalf."



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China AIDS death toll up nearly 20,000 in a year: report
Beijing (AFP) Nov 29, 2010
The total number of reported AIDS deaths in China has jumped by nearly 20,000 since an official estimate last year, state media said Monday as Beijing vowed to step up efforts to curb its spread. Deaths linked to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) since its emergence in China in the 1980s reached 68,315 by the end of October, state television said, citing figures from the health mini ... read more







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