/ 3 December 2000

Forum to forge African Aids strategies

OWN CORRESPONDENT, Addis Ababa | Sunday

MORE than 1500 key Africans are gathering here for a four-day forum to forge consensus on an African-owned, African-led response against the Aids pandemic on the continent.

The organisers of the Addis Ababa “interactive forum” say the gathering aims to break a wall of silence and rejection around the deadly disease, and to attack practices and taboos which have existed to date, and which critics say have fostered its spread.

“The interactive aspect of the forum will help to break the heavy silence with which African leaders have reacted when confronted with the threat of the pandemic,” said one of the organisers, who resist the idea that they have merely organised “yet another Aids conference.”

Africa is the continent the worst hit by the disease, but also the one which has provided the least adequate response. Aids has killed 2.4 million Africans in 2000 alone and currently affects more than 25 million in sub-Saharan Africa. The United Nations reckons it will create 40 million African orphans in the next 10 years.

The forum between Sunday and Thursday involves the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, the United Nations organisation fighting the disease UNAids, the UN development programme, the UN children’s organisation UNICEF, the World Bank and private participants.

It has made its motto: “Aids: the greatest leadership challenge.” Aids sufferers will be among those present.

The UN African Commission says a major task of the forum will be “commitments from African leaders and their development partners to make HIV/Aids a top priority on the development agenda and to invest fully in the fight.”

A UN study published last month said Africa would need between two and 10 billion dollars in foreign aid annually towards efforts to try to contain the spread of Aids.

A message by South Africa’s former president Nelson Mandela will be played at the opening. South Africa is the country with the world’s highest rate of HIV and Aids sufferers.

Top figures attending include Presidents Festus Mogae of Botswana, Paul Kagame of Rwanda, Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, Negasso Gidada of Ethiopia, plus UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. – AFP