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'What Will Happen To My Children When I Die?'
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Editor's Note: The following is a statement by Stephen Lewis, UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, made at the opening of the 15th International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, Thailand.
Every UNAIDS Biennial Report invariably contains riveting items of revelation. For me, this year's report, Women and HIV/AIDS: Confronting the Crisis, issued but a few days ago in conjunction with the International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, is no exception. The revelation, which I found to be both startling and terrifying, is that in Africa, 75% of all those infected, between 15 and 24 years of age, are young women and girls.
I well recall the last conference, two years ago in Barcelona. At the time, the UNAIDS (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS) report, and a monograph released by UNICEF, put the percentage at roughly two-thirds of 15-24 year olds. That we should now be dealing with 75% is almost beyond belief. Everyone knows of the higher rates of infection of young women and girls over young men and boys, but that the ratio should have reached 75% surpasses understanding.
The absolute figures are shocking. According to the latest statistics, there are 6.2 million people between the ages of 15 and 24 infected in Africa. It means that 4,650,000 women and girls of that age are now living with the virus.
But that's just the tip of the contagion. The report also says that young people account for more than half of all HIV infections world-wide; more than 6,000 contract the virus every day. Those numbers would obviously be higher for Africa, but even at the 6,000 figure level, the evidence suggests that well over a million young women and girls, between 15 and 24, are being newly infected annually.
This is the true nightmare intersection of youth and gender which the current report reveals. Neither Dante nor Kafka have penned so bleak a landscape. We're losing huge numbers of young women and girls in Africa. It's a pandemic within the pandemic.
And let it be said that despite all the concentrated attention on gender, this report provides yet another bracing statistical jolt: Of the 38 African countries for which data is available, every single one – I repeat, every single one – has infection rates for all women between the ages of 15 and 49 that are higher than 50% of the total. While it is true that women constitute 57% of infections overall, one would have thought that some countries, somewhere, fell below 50%. That's simply not the case.
It's worth remembering that the 5 million new infections last year were the highest ever recorded on an annual basis. The implications for Africa are clear: Amongst the 15-24 year-old women and girls, prevention is simply not working.
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