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A new UN report
AIDS devastation in Africa
By David Walsh
31 October 1998
A report issued by a United Nations agency, released October
28, spells out some of the horrifying consequences of the HIV/AIDS
epidemic for sub-Saharan Africa. According to the 1998 Revision
of the official UN world population estimates, prepared by the
Population Division of the UN Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, the average life expectancy in the 29 hardest hit African
countries is now 47, 7 years less than it would be in the absence
of the disease.
The Population Division has revised downward its projection
that world population would increase to 9.4 billion by the year
2050 by some 500 million people, to 8.9 billion, as a result
of the devastating mortality toll from HIV/AIDS. After taking
the epidemic into account, forecasters were obliged to alter their
population estimates for certain nations by as much as 23 percent.
The vast majority of the 30 million people currently infected
with the HIV virus live in sub-Saharan Africa, in some of the
world's poorest countries. In nine African countries HIV infects
more than 10 percent of the population. Twenty-five percent of
Botswana's adult population has HIV. Life expectancy in the impoverished
southern African nation has already dropped sharply and is expected
to fall by 20 years--from 61 to 41--by the year 2005. Based on
UN projections, Botswana's population may be 23 percent smaller
by 2025 than it would have been in the absence of AIDS.
The other countries with more than 10 percent of the population
infected with HIV are Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda,
South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Without AIDS, South Africa's
population, currently 37.5 million, was expected to reach 52 million
by 2015. Forecasters now predict that it will be 43 million. AIDS
killed 2.3 million people worldwide last year.
The Washington-based Worldwatch Institute, in a report issued
last month that anticipated the UN figures, drew some startling
conclusions. It noted that demographers use a three-stage model
with which to study the development of population growth rates:
stage one, during which birth and death rates are both high, leading
to little or no population growth; stage two--death rates fall
while birth rates remain high; and stage three--birth rates fall,
balancing low death rates, leading to population stability. There
are no countries presently categorized as stage one. However,
referring to the countries affected by AIDS, the report noted
that "instead of progressing to stage three as expected,
some countries are in fact falling back into stage one as the
historic fall in death rates is reversed, leading the world into
a new demographic era."
The report continued: "Barring a miracle, these societies
[the hardest hit African countries] will lose one fifth or more
of their adult population within the next decade from AIDS alone."
It added that such "high mortality trends" are "more
reminiscent of the Dark Ages than the bright new millennium so
many had hoped for."
The death rate from AIDS has been lowered in the advanced industrial
countries thanks to the development of cocktails of drugs. These
treatments are financially out of reach of the African poor. This
brutal economic reality is treated by analysts and media commentators,
when it is referred to, as a natural and unchangeable phenomenon.
See Also:
War, famine and now pestilence
Sleeping sickness ravages Central Africa
[5 September 1998]
HIV/AIDS
epidemic ravages Africa
[25 June 1998]
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