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Bush uses World AIDS Day to push Christian right agenda
By Mike Ingram
6 December 2005
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For President George W. Bush, World AIDS Day was another occasion
to pander to the Christian fundamentalist right wing that makes
up the political base of his administration.
Speaking December 1, before an assembled audience of top officials,
with an African family flown in for the photo op, Bush said, I
believe America has a unique ability, and a special calling, to
fight this disease, emphasizing US support for the ABC
approach to prevention.
He told the audience, Were working with our partners
to expand prevention efforts that emphasize abstinence, being
faithful in marriage and using condoms correctly. Bush claimed
that this strategy was pioneered by Africans and has
proven its effectiveness. He stated that through the
New Partners Initiative, Americans will further reach out
to our faith-based community organizations that provide much of
the health care in the developing world, and make sure they have
access to an American assistance.
The C in US AIDS strategy is entirely subordinate
to the call for abstinence and being faithful.
In August 2003, the Bush administration cut funding for an AIDS
program working with refugees in Africa because one of the seven
organizations involved provided family planning and abortion advice.
US AIDS policy has been condemned both inside and outside of
Africa by AIDS activists and even some governments. A statement
signed by 22 European Union member countries, led by Britain,
said, We are profoundly concerned about the resurgence of
partial or incomplete messages on HIV prevention which are not
grounded in evidence and have limited effectiveness.
The UKs International Development Secretary, Hilary Benn,
asked by the Guardian newspaper if his government disagreed
with the US, replied, Abstinence works if people can abstain,
but I dont think people should die because they have sex.
We need to make sure people have all the means (of prevention)
at their disposalcondoms and clean needles. It includes
education and access to sexual and reproductive health services.
We are very clear about that.
Ideologically motivated aid
According to a Guardian report of December 1, the United
Nations special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, Stephen Lewis, accused
the US of doing damage to Africa by cutting funds
for condoms in Uganda. There is no doubt the condom crisis
in Uganda is being driven by [US policies], Lewis said in
August. To impose a dogma-driven policy that is fundamentally
flawed is doing damage to Africa.
In 2003, 120 million condoms were distributed in Uganda, but
between October 2004 and August of this year, only 35 million
were distributed. The wife of Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni,
in an interview with the BBC World Service, equated condom use
with theft and murder. AIDS activists are linking the shift in
government thinking with US aid policy.
The US gave $459 million to the Global Fund to fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria in 2004 and pledged $414 million for
2005. The US accounts for one third of the funds $4.4 billion
commitments, but most US funding for AIDS relief comes in the
form of bilateral relationships with 15 countries.
These agreements were established through the Presidents
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), set up in 2003. The Health
Global Access Project (Health GAP) says that PEPFAR, contains
policies on prevention driven by ideological motivations which
completely ignore scientifically proven methods.
The Health GAP web site continues: The Bush administration
has tied PEPFAR funding to strict requirements such as mandating
that 33 percent of prevention funds be spent on abstinence-until-marriage
programs, limiting condom distribution to narrowly-defined high
risk groups, and demanding guarantees to explicitly condemn
sex workers. These approaches all run counter to the establishment
and continuation of comprehensive prevention programs which have
demonstrated effectiveness in slowing the spread of HIV.
The actual money promised in return for such policies is minuscule.
PEPFAR has been allocated $15 billion over a five-year period,
compared to $17.5 billion in 2005 alone for domestic HIV/AIDS
spending in the US. Total AIDS relief spending is dwarfed by the
$204 billion spent on the war in Iraq to September 2005.
An international epidemic
In 2003, the World Health Organization set the so-called 3
x 5 target under which 3 million people from low-income
countries were to receive AIDS drugs by the end of 2005. As of
June of this year, 970,000 people in low- and middle-income countries
were on AIDS drugs out of 6.5 million who urgently need them.
Around 40 million people worldwide are infected with HIV. The
Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS has estimated that roughly
5 million people were newly infected each year since 2001. The
AIDS Epidemic Update 2005, published November 21, says that HIV
has claimed more than 25 million lives since the early 1980s,
making it one of the most destructive epidemics in world history.
Some 3.1 million people died last year alone.
Though the number of cases dropped in some specific countries,
almost every region of the world saw an increase. Of the 5 million
people infected last year, two thirds, or 3 million, were in sub-Saharan
Africa. An estimated 25 million people in the region are living
with HIV, an increase of 3.6 percent from 2003.
South Africa has the largest number of cases of any single
country, with an estimated 5.2 million people, or 11 percent of
the population, infected with HIV. India comes second, with 5.1
million people infected.
In Asia, more than 1.1 million people became infected and 520,000
died last year, up from 420,000 the previous year. Increases were
also recorded in western and central Europe, where 720,000 people
are now infected, up from 700,000 in 2003. An estimated 65,000
infections were recorded this year, with 30,000 deaths due to
AIDS-related illnesses.
By far, the fastest rate of HIV infections was recorded in
eastern Europe, and primarily in the former Soviet Union. Since
2003, the number of adults and children living with HIV in eastern
Europe and Central Asia has risen to 1.6 million from 1.2 millionpart
of a 20-fold increase in the past 10 years. Drug users who share
contaminated needles are said to be driving the epidemic in those
areas, where it is also spreading among their sex partners. In
the Russian Federation alone, there are an estimated 860,000 people
living with AIDS.
Even the more advanced industrial countries have recorded an
increase in HIV infections. In the UK, 58,300 are living with
HIV with 7,275 new cases in 2004. Some estimates claim one in
three HIV positive people in the UK remains undiagnosed. Around
40,000 people in the US are infected each year, and 18,000 people
die.
An indictment of capitalism
Though AIDS arose more than 25 years ago as a product of nature,
its persistence is an indictment of the capitalist profit system
under which healthcare, like everything else, is subordinate to
the profits of a parasitic financial oligarchy.
In 2004, a mere $690 million was spent on AIDS vaccine research
and development from all sources, representing less than 1 percent
of the total spent on all health-related research. Around 48 percent
of global investment in new health products comes from the pharmaceutical
industry, yet it accounts for just 10 percent of all AIDS vaccine
funding.
A September 2005 newsletter of the International AIDS Vaccine
Initiative cites the lack of a market as the main deterrent to
the pharmaceutical companies spending more on AIDS vaccine research.
The report states, [T]he market for an AIDS vaccine is primarily
in the worlds poorest countries, where the total market
for vaccines is only about $500 million a year. This may sound
like a big payoff, but its small when compared to drug profits
that can soar to billions of dollars. In terms of profits, vaccines
are sure to lose out since a vaccine may be used only a few times
in a lifetime while drugs are often taken every day.
In 2004, the top three pharmaceutical companies, Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline
and Sanofi-Aventis, had a combined sales revenue of $108.429 billion
from research and development spending of just $21.75 billion.
America does indeed have a unique ability to fight
this disease. As the richest and most powerful nation in the world,
the United States has vast resources at its disposal. The billions
spent on slaughtering Iraqi women and children on a daily basis,
for instance, could be ploughed into AIDS vaccine research. Moreover,
the giant pharmaceutical companies could be nationalized and their
profits used to provide drugs to the 6.5 million who urgently
need them. Such policies could only emerge from the fundamental
restructuring of American society on a socialist basis.
See Also:
Anger at International
AIDS Conference over Bush administrations policies
[29 July 2004]
Bushs AIDS appointee
spells out corporate agenda
[9 October 2003]
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