MELBOURNE,
Australia--Delegates trickled in slowly
Monday morning on the third
day of the Sixth International Congress
on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific. Discussions
about the bombing raids in Afghanistan
dominated early morning conversations
in the hallways of the convention center.
In
spite of the events in Afghanistan, the conference
continued as planned and participants devoted their
attention to the agenda. The plenary sessions focused
on the role of socio-economic factors in HIV/AIDS transmission
and prevention. Sex work, drug use and migration were
given specific attention as areas especially affected
by socio-economic factors. The ultimate goal of such
focus is to place HIV/AIDS on mainstream development
agendas, rather than in isolation as a medical problem.
"We have always put HIV/AIDS as a separate
issue and not one of development," said
Indrani Gupta from the Institute of Economic
Growth, India. "This is counterproductive.
We have to mainstream HIV and realize that it
is affecting a lot of people. This will go a
long way in addressing problems of vulnerability
as well as reducing discrimination."
Sharon Burrow, President of the Australian Council
of Trade Unions supported the rights of sex workers
around the world to organize.
"Our ambition is to organize the most vulnerable
workers," she said. "Sex workers, those
who work with blood and blood products and those
who work in a community setting with those addicted
to drugs or sex workers must be allowed to organize."
Sex workers are among those most vulnerable
to HIV/AIDS infection. While prevention campaigns
can give them access to condoms and knowledge
about protecting themselves, sex workers remain
susceptible to infection.
"Condom distribution programs by themselves
are of little use without addressing the factors
which disempower women in many sexual encounters," said
Burrow. "Programs and measures to empower
women and increase their economic independence
are probably just as important an HIV intervention
as a national AIDS awareness campaign."
Speaking along the same lines, Gupta stressed
the need to see poverty alleviation as an important
part of the fight against AIDS.
"Poverty is the main reason for vulnerability,
especially in women," she said. "People
argue that poverty alleviation takes a very long
time. It does, but so does behavioral change.
Both are required and both should get an equal
footing. Behavioral change should be seen as
a component of development."
Governments have to tackle development issues
along with promoting HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns
in order to lower prevalence in countries. Stabilizing
infection levels at a high rate is not enough,
said Gupta.
Secretary Manuel Dayrit from the Department
of Health in the Philippines outlined three basic
lessons for responding to HIV/AIDS on a national
level.
"Firstly key individuals in positions of
power and influence must decide to become champions
for mobilizing a wider response to HIV/AIDS," he
said. "Secondly the response should start
with building institutional capacities and mandates
to undertake sustained activities over a long
period of time. And thirdly public support for
the national response should be carefully built
on sharing reliable information, knowledge and
understanding about the epidemic and its actual
course."
Political will and commitment is essential to
a comprehensive and effective national response
he said. This response must include improvement
in basic elements such as health care, provision
of basic human rights, especially for HIV-positive
people and an informed body of decision-makers,
both in the government and in the nongovernmental
sector.
Over 30 ministers from the region have come
to the congress for the Asia Pacific Ministerial
Meeting on HIV/AIDS and Development, which will
run from October 9 to 10. The majority of them
are Health Ministers, but most delegations also
have representatives and bureaucrats from other
ministries.
"We are hoping for a strong declaration
recognizing the epidemic in the region," said
Rob Moodie, ICAAP Co-chair and Chief Executive
Officer of the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. "Unless
there is courageous political decision making
going on, you can't have effective national policies."
The outcome of the meeting will be presented
at the final plenary of ICAAP on Wednesday. Ministers
will address issues including the relationship
of HIV/AIDS and poverty, measures for strengthening
partnerships between countries fighting the pandemic,
the impact of HIV/AIDS on regional economies
and the accessibility of therapy drugs.
"Most of the time we do not attach enough
attention to the economic and social impacts
of HIV/AIDS because physical and medical issues
take precedence," said Usa Duongsaa of Chaing
Mai University, Thailand. "But these factors
are very real and we have to face up to them."
Delegates are clearly aware of these social
impacts as HIV-positive people discuss the lack
of access to drugs and the ostracization they
face at home. Thai sex workers performed a street
play in the central hall depicting the economic
inequalities and discrimination in their society--inequalities
that are evident in the majority of the region.
There is hope that the Ministerial Meeting will
create political will to confront these factors
as well as the medical problems associated with
HIV/AIDS.
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