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AIDS campaigners sue South African government
By Barry Mason
29 August 2001
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On August 21, the South African Treatment Action Campaign (TAC)
sued the government in an attempt to force it to make available
anti-HIV drugs that TAC estimates could save 35,000 new born babies
a year from becoming infected by their HIV infected mothers. The
organization has given the government until 12 September to respond
to its legal challenge.
TAC is an alliance of 100 pediatricians and advocates for AIDS
patients, including the AIDS Law Project, the AIDS consortium
and the Congress of South African Trade Unions. The three applicants
to the affidavit filed were Siphokazi Mthathi deputy chairperson
of TAC, Dr Haroon Saloojee, head of the Division of Community
Paediatrics at the University of Witwatersrand and Johannesburg
and The Childrens Rights Centre based in Durban. The respondents
were named as Manto Tshabalala-Msimang and the heads of the nine
provincial health authorities in South Africa.
TAC has been campaigning for provision of the anti-retroviral
drugs, used to combat AIDS, to pregnant women for several years.
In South Africa around 11 percent of the population, 4.7 million
people are infected with HIV. For pregnant women the rate of HIV
infection is close to 25 percent. A quarter of babies born to
HIV-infected women become infected during childbirth. A single
dose of Nevirapine administered to the mother during the labour
would halve the transmission rate of HIV infection to babies.
There is every possibility of such a procedure being implemented
in what is a comparatively wealthy country. According to TAC figures,
the annual cost of such treatment would be only US $30m. But the
African National Congress (ANC) government, led by President Thabo
Mbeki has continually stalled on the use of anti-retroviral drugs.
Mbeki declared his own support for the so-called AIDS dissident
movement, who both denies that AIDS is a specific disease associated
with a retrovirus and consequently believe the powerful
anti-retroviral drugs to be harmful rather than beneficial. In
October 1999, Mbeki ordered a study of whether AZT, one of the
leading anti-retroviral drugs, might be a danger to health.
In November 1999, Health Minister Tshabalala-Msimang ruled
out the provision of AZT saying, Before we can even begin
to consider the appropriateness of the drugs, we fall at the hurdle
of affordability. Whilst accepting Nevirapine was less expensive,
safer and more practical, she raised the fact that the drug had
not then been registered in Uganda. In April 2000, she said that
while the trials of Nevirapine had been conducted in Uganda, the
studies have not yet been concluded with respect to long-term
safety. She also went on to say In South Africa, a
study known as SAINT is currently comparing Nevirapine with short
course AZT and 3TC for safety and efficacy for mother-to-child
transmission. We have been told by the scientists concerned that
the results of this study will not be available until June/July
this year (2000). The Medicines Control Council (MCC) has not
yet registered Nevirapine in South Africa for paediatric use.
In April this year, 39 pharmaceutical companies were forced
to withdraw their planned court action against the South African
government. In order to safeguard their patents, and therefore
their vast profits internationally, the drug companies had challenged
a paragraph in the 1997 South Africa Medicines Act, which gave
the government power to override patent laws when faced with a
medical emergency. But TAC had made a submission to the court
for the drug companies to reveal their research funding details.
This was to show how much of the research on anti-AIDS drugs is
done by universities or publicly financed bodies. Rather than
reveal this information the drug companies withdrew their action.
TAC issued a campaign statement on 24 April welcoming the dropping
of the court action and calling on the South African government
to Enact the Medicines Act immediately: Begin realising
the implementation of a country-wide mother-to-child transmission
programme without further unnecessary delays: Develop a treatment
plan by June 16, which will outline how treatment will be made
accessible to all South Africans with HIV/AIDS, and will commit
the government to increased health-care spending:
The TAC affidavit points out that the results of the SAINT
study are now available and indicate Nevirapine as being effective
in reducing mother-to-child HIV transmission. Also following the
withdrawal of the court action, the South African Medicine Control
Council approved the use of Nevirapine for pregnant women.
In July 2000 the German pharmaceutical company, Boehringer
Ingelheim, offered to make Nevirapine free for HIV infected pregnant
women for a five-year period.
Despite all this, the government still did not move to create
a national system of distribution of Nevirapine. Instead, the
Health Ministry announced it would set up a pilot project at 18
centres with the perspective of treating 90,000 expectant mothersjust
10 percent of all pregnant women.
The TAC affidavit states, Therapeutically effective and
highly cost-effective therapy is now available. But there is still
not a comprehensive system of testing and counselling in place.
All that the Respondents currently propose is a two-year pilot
phase at 18 sites, after which the government will consider designing
and implementing a comprehensive plan. Meanwhile, the rate of
HIV infection in our country has escalated at an alarming rate
during this past seven years. It is, as Dr Abdool Karim says,
an explosive epidemic which has had and will continue
to have devastating consequences.
The affidavit raises whether the government is obliged, as
a matter of law, to implement and set out clear timeframes for
a national programme to prevent mother-to-child transmission of
HIV, including voluntary counselling and testing, antiretroviral
therapy, and the option of using formula milk for feeding.
Supporting TACs initiative Dr Saloojee said, health
professionals have almost been sidelined from these issues, issues
we deal with on a daily basis. It is us in the health profession
and not the politicians and policymakers who have to deal with
the consequences of this policy. Everyday we have to deal with
dying children. Everyday we have to inform parents that their
children have HIV when it could have been prevented at minimal
cost.
The refusal of the ANC government to carry out such a program
cannot be simply attributed to Mbekis support for the position
of the AIDS dissidents. The ANC is committed to financial policies
in line with the dictates of the World Bank, the IMF and the major
Western corporations and investors for massive cuts in public
spending. Western governments have made clear they will not provide
the funds necessary to tackle such human tragedies as the HIV
epidemic in Africa and do not expect the ANC to do so, if this
means substantially increased taxation on their South African
affiliates. Moreover, through the drug companies suffered a set-back
in their efforts to protect their patent-protected monopoly position,
the ANC is far from anxious to pick a fight with them by giving
any ground to those demanding the implementation of the Medicines
Act.
See Also:
HIV/AIDS
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