| African Development Forum 2000 AIDS: The Greatest Leadership Challenge Statement by Dr. Salim Ahmed Salim,Secretary General of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), at the opening of the African Development Forum 2000 United Nations Conference Centre Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 03 December 2000 Your Excellency Dr. Negasso Gidada, President of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, Mr. K.Y. Amoako, Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa, Head of United Nations Agencies, Heads of Regional Economic Communities of Africa, Representatives of Governments and Civil Societies, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentleman, It is an honour for me to participate at this Forum that brings together a representative cross -section of stakeholders involved with some of the priority issues of African development. The OAU attaches great importance to such initiatives that enhance the collaboration between different institutions and actors who are involved in surmounting the challenges confronting our Continent The expected participation of several Heads of Slate and Government in this particular Forum and also that of the United Nation, Secretary-General, underscores the importance of the issue that will be addressed, and also the appropriateness of this gathering. Indeed this Forum serves as a means of reinforcing our determination and devising collective strategies for overcoming our problems. I wish to pay tribute to the United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the ECA, my colleague and brother, K.Y. Amoako, for this innovative initiative. There is a sense of urgency and gravity in the deliberations we are about to embark upon, which also gives all of us who have convened here today a heavy responsibility towards the people of this Continent. This is a forum unlike other forums because it is addressing a threat to our survival; a threat which is not imaginary, which is not impending; but which is real, and which is looming on us now. It is a threat whose devastation is getting more and more severe. We, who have convened here today, carry a moral duty of ensuring that, at the end of our deliberations, there will be progress in the endeavour to combat the killer pandemic of HIV/AIDS. Fifteen years have elapsed since this dreadful and deadly disease has been identified. These have been painful and costly years to so many families and to so many nations. So many individual destinies have been shattered forever in Africa and in the world as a whole. Since recognizing the gravity of this pandemic, the leadership of our Continent at the highest levels has been making serious commitments and proclamations and has been reaffirming its determination to combat the disease. This has been happening at every level of leadership, from Heads of State and Government to community lenders. For example, at the OAU Summits of Dakar and Tunisia, in 1992 and 1994 respectively, Heads of State and Government committed themselves to mobilizing the whole society in the fight against HIV/AIDS and they set the following targets:
Regrettably, many of these commitments have not been translated into action. It has taken some time for most of our countries to give appropriate recognition to the menace that we are facing. There has been, in some cases, a tendency to treat HIV/AIDS as just another misfortune, which could disappear over time. Unfortunately, available statistics on the pandemic reveal a different, awesome reality. Indeed, the figures published by UNAIDS last week show no signs of decrease in the magnitude of the pandemic in our Continent. Around 26 million adults and children are now living with HIV AIDS in Africa. About 7 million young people aged between 15-24 years are infected with the virus and sadly, around 600,000 children are being newly infected each year. It has now been ascertained that 95% of the 13.2 million children orphaned by AIDS are in Africa. HIV patients in most severely affected countries occupy some 40-70% of all beds in urban hospitals. The disease has created many orphans who have been traumatized after the ordeal of living with parents suffering from AIDS. Even more seriously, it is now having its heaviest toll on women and girls, who are the cradle of human survival. It seems that we are being overwhelmed in this battle. We are losing ground, and we are being attacked at the most vulnerable points. The present generation, the future generation, and also the bases of our socio-economic development are being assaulted. Those who have died are some of our doctors. engineers, scientists, teachers, farmers, managers and journalists whom we have trained for so long and using much of the meagre resources. Considerable efforts are now being deployed in promoting, managing and resolving conflicts in our continent. All these are aimed at improving the lot of our people so that they can live a longer and better life. The tragedy of this situation is that all this is now being severely undermined by the pandemic, which is gradually decimating the people who are to benefit from these changes. Where have we failed? Is it the failure to live up to our commitments as leaders? Are there basic constraints that have been difficult to overcome with our capacity? Is it the malady is so overwhelming and the efforts deployed so far are not correspondingly adequate? What more do we have to do? And which mistake do we have to correct? What kind of support should we expect from the international community? This Forum has a responsibility to address these questions frankly and objectively with a view to finding more effective means of launching the counter-offensive against this pandemic. In the past three years, the OAU General Secretariat has been conducting visits to a number of our member States, with a view to discussing with the leadership in the public, private, and civic sectors as well as partner institutions, the progress and constraints encountered in dealing with the HIV/AIDS challenge. The findings of our consultations have revealed that there is still a lot more that we can do, even within the framework of the commitments that we have already made. In most of the countries visited, the level of preparation to fight this pandemic was very low, with insufficient mobilization for developing a solid constituency. This has contributed to lack of transparency and inhibited discussion about HIV/AIDS both at national and community levels. In fact, most of the communities felt leaderless in dealing with the pandemic and developing coping mechanisms. Fortunately, this is new beginning to change. However, the change has to be faster, with a commitment and zeal commensurate with what it takes to confront the omnipresent threat in its multi-dimensionality. In most of our societies, the message about HIV/AIDS has not reached the bulk of the people. There is little open discussion about it, and still in many of our communities, the disease is associated with stigma and discrimination, which encourages concealment and silence. At the same time, the institutional infrastructure for coping with the disease, both in terms of prevention and amelioration, remains wanting. Many countries have only recently formulated clear national policies on the pandemic and there are still others who do not have any policy. Budgetary allocation to fight it is minimal or does not exist at all in some countries. Campaign activities in many of our societies tend to be externally driven. Excellencies, When a band of armed invaders crosses a national border and destroys one single village, maiming and killing its people, the whole nation will be mobilized to rise up and be called upon to offer the ultimate sacrifice so as to defend the motherland. Armed forces will be deployed, militia mobilized, priorities rearranged and the whole society directed to confronting the threat to national survival. What many of our African countries have been experiencing in the past two decades is far worse than an armed invasion. The staggering numbers of lives lost, the critical points in our socio-economic systems that have been incapacitated, and the mounting loss of our future as a people are devastating outcomes that surpass any war situation. There is a dire need to reorient the concept of national security to transcend invasion of borders and threats to governments. A pandemic such as HIV/AIDS is clearly a threat to the security of our nations. This is a major catastrophe confronting the people of Africa. Indeed, the very survival of our societies requires that we confront this major threat to the security and welfare of the African people. It is a serious war; and as in all war situations, total mobilization is required. The disease has to be confronted on a war footing, just as we do in confronting an armed invasion. Our societies, in their entirety, have to enter into a combat mode for liberating themselves from the pandemic. It is the responsibility of our leadership to ensure that everybody is mobilized through increased awareness and provided with adequate capacity to confront the enemy. In this regard, sufficient human and material resources have to be devoted to the cause, at the same time. The vulnerable groups have to be protected and idle corners taken care of. One area in which we must be very careful is that of stigmatization. Our people must understand that HIV/AIDS can affect anyone if precautions are not taken. It is colour blind. It respects no race, no religion, no group and no geographical boundary. It attacks the rich and the poor, the strong and the weak. It is simply an awesome menace constantly wanting to destroy. There is therefore no reason for stigmatization of any victim. In fact, those who are affected must be given compassion, love and care. Furthermore, in dealing with this major crisis, it is of paramount importance that the matter should not be left to the health sector alone, important as this sector should be; nor should it be left to non-governmental organizations, important as the role of civil society is. This is a challenge that requires the mobilization of all our resources. Every one of us at every level and using every means at our disposal has to be engaged in containing and ultimately overcoming this challenge. While concentrating our efforts on increasing awareness and prevention against the pandemic, we should also pay attention to enhancing capacity for the caring of victims and also for accessing some of the palliative drugs. We do recognize that we hare limited resources and at the same time, have other equally crucial and linked challenges in our way. However, we have to strive to ensure the availability of appropriate drugs, including those which combat opportunistic infections. The importance of getting drugs either free of charge or at reduced price is a matter of pertinent interest to all of us. 1 would like, in this respect, to take this opportunity to pay tribute to the companies that have begun to assist some African countries by providing drugs in this manner. Meanwhile, let us challenge our medical and scientific community in Africa to use their knowledge and ability to develop treatment methods that will incorporate the various constraints impinging on our people and that are best fitted to the needs of the infected persons. On this aspect, let us also keep on encouraging our traditional medicine practitioners who can make a contribution in this fight. To our scientific community in general, it is high time that they look into innovative approaches that can ignite a wide usage of available preventive measures. They should strive to investigate the root causes for the denial, on the part of some of the people, to abide by preventive measures, even where HIV prevalence is still high. Indeed, knowing the cultural and behavioural roots of such a failure will surely open the way to interventions that could increase acceptance of the measures. For Africa to succeed in her intensified effort to fight HIV/AIDS infection and its devastating effects on our population, she needs strong support from the international community in the form of well-articulated partnership. This is the reason why we at the OAU, welcome the New International Initiative on HIV/AIDS in Africa and the New International Partnership, which was endorsed by our Heads of State and Government. We strongly believe that this new approach will harmonize the objectives of all agencies in advocacy, sensitization and resource mobilization. In conclusion, I wish to reiterate that this afternoon a forum of challenges and hopes is opening in this Conference Centre. The critical question is: are we determined to meet these challenges and hopes? The OAU will stay on the frontline, and my hope remains that, in our next forum, we will have the opportunity to announce the decline of HIV/AIDS on our Continent. In this respect, I believe that the input of our deliberations will very much assist African countries in carrying forward the struggle against this pandemic. Indeed, the outcome of this Forum will also serve as an important contribution to the Extraordinary Summit of the OAU scheduled to be convened in Abuja early next year and which will be devoted to addressing the HIV/AIDS pandemic, tuberculosis, and all the other major infectious diseases. The mere fact that a special Summit is being convened to address this subject demonstrates the commitment of our leaders to seeking a way forward. It also represents the positive change that has been recently evolving within and among African States in dealing with this issue. May God give us strength for our future actions against this pandemic. Thank you. |