Port
of Spain, the capital of Trinidad and Tobago
will play host to the 10th International
Conference for People Living with HIV/AIDS.
The conference is jointly organized by
the Global Network for People Living with
HIV/AIDS (GNP+) and the Caribbean Regional
Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS
(CRN+).
"We
are really excited about it," said Ainsley Reid,
the head of CRN+ in Jamaica who will send 18 delegates. "It
is an opportunity to exchange ideas and showcase AIDS
in the Caribbean," he said whilst in New York
attending the UN special session on AIDS.
The conference, which will be held from October
27-31, was due to be held in the Caribbean. Previous
conference have been held in Colorado, Paris, and
Poland.
"The International Conference has already
taken place in Africa, Asia and in Eastern Europe," said
Dr. Peter Piot, head of UNAIDS. "Each conference
has been an opportunity to bring higher attention
to the needs of the host region. The selection
of the Caribbean as the site for 2001 is critically
important as some of the island nations have worse
epidemics than any other country in the world outside
sub-Saharan Africa. This shows clearly how urgent
it is to take strong action against the epidemic
in this part of the world and no doubt, the venue
of Port-of-Spain will provide much-needed emphasis
to that effect."
The conference provides people living with HIV/AIDS
who volunteer as peer counselors and educations
in their homes communities to meet, discuss, and
compare notes on different approaches, and medical
advances.
In preparation for the conference Trinidad released
its first five year national strategy last week
in cooperation with UNAIDS. The strategy is an
across the board approach to combating AIDS in
the country involving groups like CRN+, the private
sector, religious groups, health care groups, and
the government.
The official AIDS infection rate in Trinidad is
2 percent, but many experts estimate it maybe much
higher as much of the population remains untested,
and AIDS myths and stigmas abound. The Caribbean
has the highest HIV/AIDS infection rate after sub-Saharan
Africa in the world.
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