Leaders Claim Success on World AIDS Day
Health activists around the globe are using Saturday's annual observance of World AIDS Day to focus attention on efforts
to combat the pandemic.
The U.N.-sponsored Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria says it has provided drugs for nearly 1.5 million
people living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
Thousands of people have gathered in Johannesburg where a benefit concert hosted by former South African President
Nelson Mandela is underway.
Some 50,000 people are expected at the concert which features international artist such as Annie Lennox, Peter Gabriel
and the Goo Goo Dolls. It is the fifth annual event hosted by Mr. Mandela to help fight AIDS.
In the United States, President Bush is urging lawmakers to approve his proposal to spend $30 billion over the next five
years to fight the disease.
The president started a five-year, $15 billion-initiative in 2003 to provide life-saving drugs to AIDS patients in 120
countries, with an emphasis on 15 nations, mostly in Africa.
U.S. officials say the number of people receiving treatment in sub-Saharan countries has risen from 50,000 to 1.5
million.
During a World AIDS Day event Friday, Mr. Bush announced that he and his wife Laura will travel to sub-Saharan Africa
early next year to get a first-hand look at U.S.-sponsored AIDS programs.
The head of UNAIDS, Peter Piot, said there is still a serious shortfall in resources for fighting the disease, and that
those afflicted with AIDS continue to be stigmatized and suffer discrimination.
UNAIDS now says 32.7 million people were living with the virus in 2006 - nearly seven million fewer than previously
estimated.
ENDS