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EPIDEMICS
Global AIDS funding cuts will affect millions: activists
by Staff Writers
Johannesburg (AFP) Nov 28, 2011


A $1.6-billion (1.2-billion-euro) cut in funding for AIDS treatment could affect millions of people as donors failed to meet commitments to the Global Fund, campaigners said Monday.

The Global Fund last week said it would not bankroll new AIDS treatment projects until 2014 because the world financial crisis forced donor countries to cut spending.

A civil society coalition including groups like aid agency Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and South Africa's Treatment Action Campaign accused rich nations of using the crisis as an excuse.

"This is not an issue of funding. It comes down to broken promises," said Daygan Eager, of the Budget Expenditure Monitoring Forum, which campaigns for AIDS funding in southern Africa.

"In a crisis, donating to the Global Fund is not good politics," Eager told a press conference in Johannesburg.

The Global Fund is the world's largest multilateral funder of AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria programmes, and says its programmes have saved 7.7 million lives.

It has financed 70 percent of anti-retroviral drugs in the developing world and is one of the major funders of medicine in sub-Saharan Africa, home to two thirds of all people living with AIDS.

The Netherlands, Denmark, Italy and the European Commission reneged on funding commitments, while Germany is delaying disbursements, according to campaigners.

The announcement came as the United Nations reported last week that expanded access to treatment had slashed the number of AIDS deaths, as the number of people receiving treatment in sub-Saharan Africa had jumped by 20 percent between 2009 and 2010.

"We are calling on the international community not to give up on this. Local governments are doing their bit, but it's not enough," said Fazil Tezera, MSF head for Zimbabwe, which relies on the Global Fund for over 60 percent of its monies.

"The more we treat people, the fewer infections we will have," said Eric Goemaere, South Africa medical officer at MSF (Doctors without Borders).

"Unfortunately the political message today is to treat less people."

The last funding round in October 2010 fell $8.3 billion short of the Fund's $20 billion target.

After the Fund's board met last week in Ghana, the organisation announced that it would focus its more limited resources on poorer countries, and urged the rich world to follow through on promised donations.

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Brazil says it has AIDS under control
Brasilia (AFP) Nov 28, 2011 - Brazil said Monday its AIDS epidemic was under control, with a 0.61 percent cut in new cases between 2009 and 2010, although a rise among young homosexuals was a cause for concern.

"The AIDS epidemic remains stable," the health ministry said in its latest epidemiological report.

The statistics in Latin America's biggest country showed that the number of new cases fell 0.61 percent between 2009 and 2010 from 35,979 to 34,212.

"We are seeing a downward trend in the number of cases over the years. People are living longer and better with the disease," Health Minister Alexandre Padilha told a press conference.

The number of cases since records began in 1980 totaled 608,230 until last June.

The number of deaths from the disease also fell, from 12,097 in 2009 to 11,965 in 2010.

Brazil, with a population of more than 191 million, produces 10 of the 20 AIDS drugs and also distributes them to African and Latin American countries.

It also distributes, free of charge, 500,000 condoms every year.

But health authorities said they were concerned by an increase in AIDS cases among young homosexuals aged 15 to 24.

The percentage of men having sex with men infected with the disease in that age group rose from 25.2 percent of the total in 1990 to 46.4 percent in 2010, the ministry said.

"Last year, for every 16 homosexuals in this age group there were 10 heterosexuals. In 1998, it was 12 for 10," it added.



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