| African Development Forum 2000 AIDS: The Greatest Leadership Challenge DECLARATION BY AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY ANISAT Preamble We, the African Civil Society Organizations represented at the Africa Development Forum 2000, recognize and applaud the courageous and ongoing efforts made by community-based organizations, groups of People Living with HIV/AIDS and their networks, to combat the pandemic of HIV/AIDS. We call on our governments and the international community to recognize and support these efforts, which must also be expanded to other organizations of civil society. We call for greater focus on People Living with HIV/AIDS, youth and the media as central partners in the common struggle against HIV/AIDS. We recognize the challenge of HIV/AIDS as the greatest threat facing the current generation in Africa. It is an all-encompassing social, economic, cultural and political crisis. HIV/AIDS is a threat that calls for all of society to be mobilized if we are to prevail. We are encouraged that African national and continental leaders, and international donors and partners, are recognizing the scale of the challenge posed by HIV/AIDS. We urge them to do more, to match the efforts of African citizens and civil society organizations. We urge them to enter into a true partnership with African civil society: it is through such a partnership that we will succeed. A Partnership against HIV/AIDS in Africa We, African civil society organizations, call for our leaders, our civil society and our citizens to forge a true partnership, to work together to overcome HIV/AIDS in Africa. We submit that there is no simple plan of action that can overcome this scourge. Instead we propose a true partnership, in the form of a grand coalition of leaders, organizations and individuals at all levels, working in their different ways towards a common goal: the conquest of HIV/AIDS. This partnership challenges our leaders, and sets down basic principles for collective action. Challenges to our Leaders We, African civil society organizations, call upon the following leaders to fulfill their responsibilities: 1. National political leaders. Our national political leaders have responsibilities:
2. Voluntary and grassroots leaders. Recognizing the leading role they are playing in responding to the pandemic, voluntary and grassroots leaders, including People Living with HIV/AIDS and Youth, we should continue to search for and implement innovative, effective and people-centered means of struggling against HIV/AIDS. 3. Women leaders. Women leaders, in government, civil society and international organizations, can play a key leadership role in mobilizing society, empowering their sisters, and changing attitudes and behavior. Male leaders have a responsibility to encourage and respect women leaders. 4. Religious leaders. Religious leaders have the responsibility to initiate moral and social responses to HIV/AIDS such as caring for sick people and orphans, renegotiating gender roles, promoting the social inclusion of PLWAs, fighting against stigma and human rights abuses. 5. Business leaders. Entrepreneurs, business-people and especially transnational corporations have responsibilities to their employees, to take the necessary steps to minimize HIV transmission at the workplace, to treat employees living with HIV/AIDS without discrimination. 6. Trade union leaders. Based on notions of solidarity and equality, trade unions have the responsibility, to educate workers about protection and to act as a safety net for those who have been infected with HIV. The international leadership of labor organizations have a duty to support their comrades in Africa. 7. Intellectual leaders. Professors, researchers and public intellectuals have a responsibility and an opportunity for shaping thinking and action. 8. Education sector leaders. Teachers have major responsibilities to their pupils, not only while they are studying but throughout their lifetimes. Teachers should include education about HIV/AIDS in the curriculum, and should lead by example, both in their own personal conduct and by making special efforts to include and respect students who are HIV positive and those who are caring for family members living with HIV/AIDS. 9. Cultural and social leaders. Cultural figures and celebrities serve as role models and opinion formers, especially for youth. They can influence the cultural environment positively. 10. Media leaders. Journalists, broadcasters, editors, chat-show hosts, actors, script-writers for soap operas: all these individuals and their respective institutions need to be mobilized, educated and strengthened to play important roles:
11. Military leaders. Military and police commanders have responsibilities to ensure that their uniformed officers and troops do not transmit HIV They also have duties towards their officers and men who are HIV positive, and their families. 12. International leaders. Leaders of international organizations, including African organizations, UN agencies, donor governments, or international financial institutions, have a responsibility to respond to the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa, and to support African initiatives with generosity and fairness. International organizations should set an example of transparency and accountability in acknowledging their past records of inadequate response to the pandemic. Basic Principles of the Partnership We, African civil society organizations, seek to focus on the following issues: 1. Inclusion of People Living with HIV/AIDS. No campaign to address the challenge of HIV/AIDS can possibly succeed without the full participation of PLWA at all levels, including policymaking and policy implementation. People Living with HIV/AIDS are human beings, members of their community and citizens, and their human rights must be respected in full. We call for participation that is comprehensive, meaningful, consistent, democratic, and immediate. 2. Overcoming Denial, Stigma and Discrimination. An absolutely
3. Empowerment of Women. More than half of those infected by HIV in Africa are women. Women and girls are vulnerable because of cultural, social, economic and political gender inequalities. Rape, sexual violence and domestic violence must be targeted for elimination from our societies. Women and girls must be provided with the knowledge, skills, resources and power to be able to refuse unsafe sex. There must be no double standards when discussing commercial sex work. Women also bear the greater burden of caring for people who are suffering from AIDS. We call for a comprehensive program for the achievement of women's rights. 4. Resource Mobilization and Allocation. Africa's governments are poor, but can devote more resources to HIV/AIDS. Existing mechanisms to support CSOs and community efforts are grossly inadequate. Existing resources mobilized and allocated to combat HIV/AIDS in Africa are scarce and insufficient. We call for direct funding to Coos and their networks. We call for African Heads of State to prioritize HIV/AIDS programs in their legislation, policy making, financing and policy implementation across all sectors. International donors, who have far greater resources, should prioritize HIV/AIDS programs including prevention, care and the highest quality treatment. African governments should consider receiving loans for AIDS programs as an immoral commitment, which they should never make on behalf of their citizens. We call for donors to provide grants only. We also note that the struggle against HIV/AIDS requires a positive environment of economic development, and we call upon international creditors to relieve Africa's unsustainable debt immediately and in full, and provide more resources towards equitable and sustainable development. 5. Reduction of the Transmission of HIV /AIDS transmission must be
6. Treatment. The treatment of People Living with HIV/AIDS is a basic human
7. Care. Africans living with HIV/AIDS deserve the highest quality of care.
8. Vaccine Development. African People Living with HIV/AIDS and their
9. Strengthening CSOs and their networks. The true partnership requested to effectively respond to this pandering demands strong, informed, skilled and organized civil society organizations. We call on governments and the international community to support CSOs and their networks financially and technically to play their full role. The Way Forward Our common aim and vision is to ignite a social movement encompassing all civil society and governments in a true partnership to overcome HIV/AIDS. Our starting point is the efforts of the existing CSOs and their networks, including especially organizations of People Living with HIV/AIDS and the Youth. We are mindful of the fact that HIV/AIDS is a societal crisis and any effective response must be a social, economic and political response. Creating a mass movement means unleashing the creative energies of ordinary people to empower them to take their destinies into their own hands. The central role is played by CSOs. Governments should play their proper role in designing public policy in a way that will create an enabling environment for a social movement. Donors including international financial institutions should provide resources, in support of the modalities laid down by the African agenda. We call upon all participants in this Conference to study the true partnership arrived at by the Civil Society Organizations, and to disseminate this through campaigns on their return to their home countries. Governments should disseminate the ideas through meetings, directives and the media. International donors should support these exercises. We express our gratitude to the President of Nigeria and the Secretary General of the OAU for the initiative to convene a special OAU Summit on the issue of HIV/AIDS. We, the African CSOs, consider this a significant step forward. It is a signal that our leaders are taking HIV/AIDS with the seriousness that it deserves. We consider the Summit to indicate an irreversible commitment: we shall go forward from here. To continue with the spirit of ADF 2000, we request that the recommendations from this Forum, including the CSO Common Compact, be forwarded to the Abuja Summit and presented to all our Heads of State as a major contribution. In the spirit of ADF 2000, we further request that CSOs, including especially those representing PLWA and Youth, be invited to participate fully and to speak for themselves in the Abuja Summit. We the CSOs are committed to expanding and strengthening our existing networking and advocacy role. We call on OAU and ECA together with their partners as part of the post-ADF activities to technically and financially support the existing networks so as to enable them to effectively fulfill the leadership role at national, subregional, continental and global levels. To this end we propose the creation of a CSO Focal Point at the OAU and ECA We, the African CSOs, including PLWA and Youth, reiterate our commitment to be active partners in the Common Compact of collective social mobilization against HIV/AIDS in Africa. We call on our national and continental leaders and our international partners to support our efforts. We believe that if we act together, with honest commitment and common purpose, we shall overcome the HIV/AIDS pandering in our continent. |