UN Wants Brazil to End Discrimination on AIDS Treatment

Angels of Brazil With the goal of promoting awareness of the link between AIDS and tuberculosis and the necessity to address discrimination in Brazil's response to HIV, the head of the United Nations agency charged with coordinating the fight against HIV/AIDS is in Brazil this week .

Brazil is home to some 40% of people (730,000) living with HIV in Latin America, the largest epidemic in the region, while the next most significant HIV-positive population lives in Mexico with 200,000 people.

However, AIDS mortality rates were halved between 1996 and 2002 thanks to the country's commitment to providing access to both HIV prevention and treatment services, which has also helped stabilise the epidemic.

"We have to stop people living with HIV from dying of tuberculosis," Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of the Joint UN Program on HIV/AIDS UNAIDS, said at the launch of a report by the World Health Organization, WHO on global TB control.

"Universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support must include TB prevention, diagnosis and treatment. When HIV and TB services are combined, they save lives," stressed Mr. Sidibé.

Underscoring a message of solidarity with those affected by HIV and his opposition to laws blocking AIDS services, Mr. Sidibé will meet in Brasí­lia with government officials, the National Congress Parliamentary group on HIV, as well as civil society actors active in promoting HIV awareness, protecting human rights and ending stigma and discrimination.

One meeting will bring together national level representatives of groups representing people living with HIV, youth, women, and lesbians, gays, bisexuals and trans-genders to discuss these issues within the national and local context.

Mr. Sidibé also plans to visit organizations providing vital services to children and young people in Rio de Janeiro as part of his first official trip to Brazil since becoming Executive Director of UNAIDS.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

25 per 100,000: Brazil’s Per-Capita Homicide Rate Is Three Times the World Average

Earlier this year, in September, the United Nations released a report on Brazilian arbitrary, ...

Brazil Wants Kyoto to Protect Forests

Actions to prevent illegal deforestation should be one of the mechanisms of the Kyoto ...

Brazil: In Morrinho the War Never Ends

It’s midmorning in Morrinho. Three figures peer down from a concrete rooftop at the ...

World Social Forum Leaves Brazil

The World Social Forum took place in Porto Alegre, in the south of Brazil, ...

Agriculture Represents 36% of All Brazilian Exports

2008 was excellent for Brazil in foreign trade of agribusiness products. Sector exports reached ...

Brazil’s Fino Grí£o, an Export Coffee with Extreme Quality Control

About 80% of the green coffee produced by the Veloso family for over 150 ...

Israeli Drone to Police Rio’s Favelas in Cleaning Up Effort Before Olympics

Starting next month an unmanned "spy" aircraft will overfly the favelas (shantytowns) of Rio ...

Latin America Needs Brazilian Help to Fight AIDS

Brazil will help other Latin American and Caribbean countries fulfill their goals for HIV/AIDS ...

Brazil’s Petrobras to Issue Stocks to Raise US$ 20 Billion in the Market

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has signed the bill governing the capitalization ...

Amnesty Calls for End to Impunity after Murder of Nun in Brazil

Amnesty International condemned the killing of 74-year-old Sister Dorothy Stang, on February 12, in ...