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South Africa: AIDS conference accepts limited agenda
By Chris Talbot
29 July 2000
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The grim conclusion to be drawn from the 13th International
Conference on AIDS is that most of the world's 34 million people
currently infected with HIV/AIDS will be left to their fate. This
is despite the fact that the conference in Durban, South Africa
July 9-14, drew the attention of the world's media and pledges
of financial support by the World Bank, the United States government,
Bill Gates and a number of drug corporations.
The epidemic is now spreading at a phenomenal rate, with a
further 5.4 million added to the total last year. Over 90 percent
of the 34 million infected are in the underdeveloped countries
where there is no treatment available. In sub-Saharan Africa 24.5
million are infected.
Former South African President Nelson Mandela received a standing
ovation from the 12,000 scientists, professionals and campaigners
assembled in Durban for his concluding speech. Yet the agenda
he outlined, which Western governments, aid agencies and the United
Nations back, will do little to overcome the epidemic.
Mandela's speech tacitly accepted that the antiretroviral drugs
and advanced health care used to tackle HIV/AIDS in Western countries
could not be afforded in Africa and other underdeveloped countries.
All that he called for was a prevention campaign promoting sexual
abstinence, condom use, drugs to prevent women in labour passing
HIV infection to their babies, and other measures such as HIV
counselling and testing services. However important these measures
are, even they are beyond the budget of many African countries
and fall far short of more effective treatments available for
HIV/AIDS sufferers in the West.
Many speakers at the conference expressed their anger at the
lack of concern by Western governments, as well as the huge profits
made by drugs companies out of antiretroviral treatments. However,
Mandela was able to use his prestige to keep the conference within
the agenda backed by the UN. His call for an African resolve
to fight this war essentially amounted to absolving Western
governments of any responsibility for the continent's unprecedented
social crisis.
Whilst the conference was organised by the International AIDS
Society, its main financial sponsors were the major drug corporations.
Mandela was particularly helped by the highly publicised and
reactionary intervention of South African President Thabo Mbeki
in the run-up to the conference. Mbeki had attempted to promote
a tiny number of dissident scientists who disagree with the well-established
scientific theory that the HIV virus causes AIDS. Mbeki strongly
suggested that an African solution to an African problem
was required. Not only did his questioning of basic science create
confusion in Africa, where there has been virtually no education
about AIDS, it helped set the limited agenda for the conference.
Just before the conference a declaration of over 5,000 leading
scientists, including 12 Nobel Prize winners, was published in
the science magazine Nature affirming HIV as the source
of the disease. However, Mbeki made clear he would not back down
in his opening speech, saying, We could not blame everything
on a single virus. This prompted a walk out by hundreds
of participants and repeated attacks were made on Mbeki during
the proceedings.
Mandela did not fundamentally challenge Mbeki's stance, however.
He attempted to divert from the serious issues that had been raised,
making statements such as the dispute about the primacy
of politics or science [should] be put on the back burner
and that we proceed to address the needs of those suffering
and dying. It is impossible to speak of making any significant
headway against the AIDS epidemic so long as political leaders
are able to undermine a scientific response to the crisis.
It is unlikely that the South African ANC government will implement
even Mandela's restricted proposals. None of its ministers attended
the conference and it has continued its stance on refusing to
supply the antiretroviral drug AZT to HIV pregnant mothers. UN
figures show that 22 percent of pregnant women in South Africa
are now HIV positive.
It has also became clear that the UN's limited agenda for sub-Saharan
Africa as a whole will not receive anywhere near the finance required,
despite the conference publicity and Mandela's pleas. UN estimates
are that this would require US$3 billion a year, 10 times the
current amount spent. At the conference, the World Bank claimed
it would make $350 million available; Bill Gates and drug company
Merck & Co. pledged $30 million each, far short of the UN's
appeal.
Perhaps the most callous response came from the United States
government with headline proposals for up to $1 billion a year
to be made available in loans for AIDS drugs. The loans are conditional
on countries purchasing drugs from US pharmaceutical companies,
which have offered to reduce their prices, and are concerned that
African countries may purchase drugs elsewhere. Under the WTO's
Trade-related Intellectual Property Rights (Trips) system, countries
are supposed to be prohibited from manufacturing their own, cheaper
version of the drugs rather than buying from the global corporations;
although some countries such as Brazil and India are in fact doing
so. The loans would also have to be repaid at commercial interest
rates averaging 7 percent, by countries that are already amongst
the most debt-burdened in the world. Sub-Saharan Africa presently
pays some $15 billion a year in debt repayments, approximately
four times more than these countries spend on health or education.
The conference report by the independent PANOS institute gave
some indication of the scale of the resources that would need
to be mobilised to tackle the AIDS calamity. To treat the 400,000
HIV/AIDS infected people in Zambia with antiretroviral drugs for
one year would cost £2 billion, and to provide an adequate
health infrastructure to deliver the treatment would cost a similar
amount. The corresponding figure for Uganda is £1.9 billion.
In other words, the amount proposed by the UN for its basic package
for the whole of Africa would not pay for effective treatment
in just one country. That this global catastrophe could elicit
no more than a call to break the silencethe
educative theme of the conferenceis a huge indictment of
world political leaders and current government attitudes to social
welfare.
See Also:
UN report on AIDS paints a picture of
devastation
[17 July 2000]
South Africa: The ANC government and
the AIDS crisis
[5 July 2000]
HIV/AIDS
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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