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ARV Cutbacks Reach Crisis Level

Posted 12 May 2010, 10:36 A, by Elly Katabira, IAS President
On 10 May, 2010, The New York Times published an article by Donald McNeil Jr. with the startling but accurate title, “At Front Lines AIDS War is Falling Apart.” This report was reproduced in Uganda’s leading newspaper – The New Vision – today, 12 May, 2010. The article highlights what we, the health workers at the frontline, had feared all along what might happen if there was any loss of momentum in funding HIV care, particularly in countries with limited resources such as Uganda. McNeil uses Uganda as a case study where patients in urgent need of ARVs to save their lives are being turned away without treatment. I am convinced that similar scenarios are already happening in other countries, particularly across sub-Saharan Africa. If this is not happening yet, then it is just a matter of time. The articles raise one simple question: Why are we now losing a battle that we had fought so hard… and won? And where are the friends, including the G8 nations, that pledged to support universal access to HIV care in 2005? More...

Universal Access Now

Posted 17 March 2010, 10:55 P, by Julio Montaner, Former IAS President

World leaders who committed to universal access to HIV prevention, care, treatment and support by 2010 must be held accountable. This week the IAS is launching a major campaign to do just that. We are mobilizing our14,000+ members along with tens of thousands allies around the globe to speak directly to world leaders about what is at risk as they continue to falter in their commitment to provide the resources and leadership needed to achieve universal access.

Our Universal Access Now campaign calls for a global recommitment to universal access as the Global Fund prepares for its replenishment meetings later this month and again in October and the Group of Eight and Group of 20 prepare to meet in Canada in June.  More...

Universal Access? We Now Know It’s Possible

Posted 17 March 2010, 06:40 P, by Robin Gorna, Former IAS Executive Director

Most political leaders seem to be abandoning AIDS and giving up on the drive for universal access. But last week, on 9 March, U.K. Minister of State for International Development Gareth Thomas stood up and said the U.K. wants to see action on the pledge to achieve universal access – a pledge the U.K. pressed for at Gleneagles when it had the G8 Presidency in 2005. And he called on other G8 and G20 members to recommit to moving forward.

Last week he chaired a high-level meeting in the impressive “Moses room” in the House of Lords in London to re-energize the political momentum for universal access – and he asked me to facilite the discussion among donors and the representatives of eight heavily affected African countries.

Minister Gareth Thomas with Annie Lennox and Vuyiseka Dubula of Treatment Action Campaign.

Among those attending were cabinet ministers, heads of national AIDS commissions, and civil society representatives, including people living with HIV. And the global players were there too: U.S. Ambassador Eric Goosby who leads PEPFAR, the heads of the Global Fund and UNAIDS, Michel Kazatchkine and Michel Sidibé, and our own President, Julio Montaner. It was a small crowd, but a stellar one – and one made even more striking when Annie Lennox turned up to add her passion and zeal to the conversation. 

In 2005, Lennox took part in BandAid, the massive fundraiser to “Make Poverty History”, where she sang and spoke movingly about the impact of AIDS on children – a campaign that she has dear to her heart. That same year, many of the rest of us had been around a table similar to the one we were at this past week. That meeting, called “Making The Money Work” and also hosted by DfID and occurring on 9 March, was convened to develop strategies for greater global cooperation as the level of resources for global AIDS initiatives was expanding dramatically.   More...