World
Conference on Religion And Peace (WCRP)
On
June 9 -12, 2002, Her Excellency, Chief Dr. Uwa
Onyioha Osimiri, Continental Envoy for the Chiism
(Godianism) for the Americas, participated in
Nairobi Kenya as a delegate of the United Nation's
World Conference on Religion And Peace.
Senior
religious leaders from across Africa adopted a
progressive Declaration, which for the first time
mobilizes action to end stigma and expand programs
to protect children affected by AIDS.
The
meeting, organized by the World Conference on
Religions for Peace and the Hope for African Children
Initiative, was a forum for religious leaders
to reflect on their own role in the fight against
AIDS in Africa and prompt their active engagement.
Acknowledging past shortcomings with regards to
stigma, ignorance and denial, religious leaders
adopted a joint Declaration and a Plan of Action.
"As spiritual leaders of this continent and
faith-driven spokes people, we consider it our
divine imperative to work for the good of the
children of Africa," declared John Onaiyekan,
Archbishop of Abuja, Nigeria.
|
Chief
Dr. Uwa Osimiri's Trip To Nairobi, Kenya;
United Nations World Conference on Religions
for Peace assembly of Africa's Religious
Leaders From 6/9/02 to 6/12/02. |
"As
long as there is stigma, efforts aimed at prevention
will never be enough," reflected Nazlin Omar
Fazaldin Ratput, National Deputy Secretary of
Women's Affairs, Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims.
"We must recognize that AIDS is going to
have a greater impact than slavery and colonialism.
Let's face it: 8% of the world's population is
carrying 90% of the AIDS burden". African
religious leaders recommended that they focus
on the "healing of the minds" instead
of furthering "shame" and exclusion
of people living with HIV/AIDS. "We must
lead efforts to change attitudes, adopt policies,
and devote resources to protect our children,
in particular girls," proclaimed Cardinal
Emmanuel Wamala, Archbishop of Kampala, Uganda.
Stephen
Lewis, UN Secretary General Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS
in Africa, was encouraged by the courageous response
of the Assembly, "Who else, besides religious
leaders, is so well-placed to lead? Who else has
access to communities once a week, every week,
across the continent? Who else better understands
the consequences of AIDS for children and their
families? This conference may yet be seen to be
the turning point for the religious response to
AIDS in Africa."
The
Declaration of Action called on religious leaders
to creatively re-examine their traditions to allow
all believers to fight this disease in ways respectful
of their consciences. "We recognize that
all people have a right to information on how
the spread of the disease can be stopped,"
explained Twaib Mukuye, Deputy Mufti of the Uganda
Muslim Supreme Council. "There is now a mandate
to temples across Africa. This leadership structure
will bring a new voice to the global and regional
efforts to ensure that every African child has
hope for the future," said William Vendley,
Secretary General of the World Conference of Religions
and Peace.
As
religious leaders and key opinion-makers, delegates
have recognized their capacity to mobilize not
only the people they serve, but also political
leaders. Specific demands were made on African
governments and the international community to
urgently respond to the AIDS emergency. "We
call on our governments to abolish school fees
and immediately withhold debt servicing payments
to the World Bank, IMF, and wealthy G8 governments,
and to commit these resources to eradicate poverty
and implement HIV/AIDS interventions. We call
on the G8 to donate US $7-10 billion this year
to stop AIDS, " says Hajia Katoumi Mahama,
President of the Women Muslim Association of Ghana.
The
Declaration of Action called on religious leaders
to creatively re-examine their traditions to allow
all believers to fight this disease in ways respectful
of their consciences. "We recognize that
all people have a right to information on how
the spread of the disease can be stopped,"
Her
Excellency, Chief Dr. Osimiri initiated an interfaith
Global march to be hosted by the African Women
Economic Consortium(AWEC)and the Godian Religion
in conjunction with all Religions of the world
who are charged with the responsibility to put
aside all differences and march as one to raise
funds and awareness about the HIV/AIDS Holocaust
in Africa on July 12,2003.
The objective of the Global March is to raise
awareness globally about the Holocaust going on
in Africa where whole generations are succumbing
to the HIV/AIDS virus. The world will be marching
at the same time(time differences will be taken
into consideration)in Africa, the Caribeans, United
States, United Kingdom, South America, Jamaica,
Virgin Islands, Asia,and some European nations
to show their support and to state that enough
is enough!
It
is estimated that by next year approximately 40
million Africans will perish due to the devastating
and unrelenting impact of HIV/AIDS. This does
not include death due toMalaria,Cholera, dysentery,
the Bubonic Plague and wars.
It
is not determined exactly how HIV/AIDS got into
Africa, but it is sure to be the disease that
is destined to wipe out a race of people if the
world continues to turn a deaf ear to this calamity.
It is the responsibility of all the sons and daughters
of the African continent and all the children
of God who care about all of Gods creations, to
march with one voice to demand that more is done
about HIV/AIDS in Africa.
This
march is intended to be the ultimate response
to a call for humanity to reach out from every
part of the world to help the suffering masses
of Africa. We wish to Raise funds for all the
Participating Non governmental grass roots organizations
in Africa that genuinely care for those impacted
by this pandemic epidemic. These organizations
generally do not receive any of the funding available
through the large International funding organizations.
 |
Picture
on left shows 7-year old Salem Yassin
of Kenya who is Infected with AIDS, as
he addressed the United Nations World
Conference of Religions for Peace (WCRP)
assembly of African Religious Leaders
in Nairobi Kenya.
According
to his care givers, Yassin has lost all
his family to the disease. In recognition
of the condition of this young man and
millions like him, we have selected Yassin
as the Poster Child for the Global March.
|
WORLD'S
AIDS CRISIS IS WORSENING REPORT SAYS.
By
John Donnelly, Globe Staff
WASHINGTON
- The AIDS pandemic will rapidly worsen, with
the number of cases possibly doubling in sub-Saharan
Africa in five years, according to an analysis
by US intelligence officials.
The
conclusion by analysts at the National Intelligence
Council, an arm of the Central Intelligence Agency
that studies issues of long term strategic interest
to the US government, is largely based on worrisome
figures in Nigeria and Ethiopia, which together
account for nearly a third of the people in sub-Saharan
Africa. Both
countries, with a combined population of nearly
200 million, have surpassed 5 percent infection
rates among adults, a tipping point in several
other African countries after which the rate of
prevalence soared into double digits.
The
analysts are particularly concerned about possible
sharp increases in HIV and AIDS in India, the
second most populous nation in the world. India
has a large percentage of uneducated people and
political leadership that hasn't adequately begun
to destigmatize the disease, the analysts said.
That same mix of factors was deadly in the first
wave of the crisis in Africa. India already has
an estimated 3 million people infected with HIV
or AIDS.
The
AIDS pandemic is entering a "stage of substantial
increases in size and scope," said a senior
US intelligence official last week in an interview
at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., speaking
on condition of anonymity. Another senior intelligence
official described the crisis as entering "a
larger breakout phase."
About
40 million people are infected with HIV or AIDS,
which already is the deadliest disease in human
history. About 23 million people have died from
the disease - far more than even Europe's Black
Death in the 14th century, according to medieval
scholars.
In
Africa, roughly 23 million people were infected
with the disease in 1997, according to UNAIDS,
the joint United Nations program for HIV/AIDS.
The figure is 30 million now, a 30 percent increase
over the previous five-year period. A doubling
of cases in Africa in the next five years would
push the number of people infected there to 60
million by 2007, analysts from the National Intelligence
Council said.
Those
dying are mostly people in the prime of their
lives, a fact that has disastrous impact on economic
growth, education and health systems, and the
security infrastructure of the world's most vulnerable
continent.
The
new projections almost surely will be given considerable
weight among leading global health officials because
the National Intelligence Council has a strong
track record in forecasting trends about HIV and
AIDS. The council was the lone voice in the US
government a decade ago that called attention
to the disease. In 1991, it predicted 45 million
infections by the year 2000.
Senior
policymakers at the World Health Organization,
World Bank, and UNAIDS said last week that while
they had not heard about US intelligence's new
projections, they believed the forecast could
be on target.
The
Bush administration will focus on global development
and combating the African crisis at the G-8 summit
in Alberta, Canada, on June 26. The biannual international
AIDS conference follows early next month in Barcelona.
The
information about a spike in HIV prevalence in
Africa was first revealed April 16 in a wood-paneled
room at The National Academies in downtown Washington.
In the first day of a two-day Institute of Medicine
seminar on the impact and globalization of the
disease, David F.Gordon, a National Intelligence
Council officer on economics and health issues,
delivered the news in a 20-minute talk. Addressing
the nation's leading health experts, he said "Nigeria
and Ethiopia may be at the takeoff point, where
the epidemic becomes much, much, much more serious
in the next five years," according to a tape
recording of the meeting. "If, indeed, that
is the case, if we are in a situation in Nigeria
and Ethiopia parallel to that in 1992, '93, '94
[to that in southern Africa], and we do have a
big run-up in prevalence rate, it's not inconceivable
that the number of HIV infections could double
in the next five years" in Africa, he said.
Though
Nigeria claims an official 6 percent HIV infection
rate, Gordon said, "A lot of people believe
the numbers are closer to 10 percent already and
might be on a much higher trajectory." Ethiopia's
infection rate, he said, also was roughly 10 percent,
or higher. Ethiopia acknowledges those figures.
Jim
Yong Kim, a Harvard infectious disease specialist,
attended the meeting. "His talk blew me away,"
said Kim, a founder of Partners in Health, a Cambridge-based
group running several international projects serving
the health needs of the poor. "The NIC is
the best at looking at HIV prevalence rates and
projecting into the future," he said, "and
if these guys are right about Nigeria and Ethiopia,
it's more shocking news about the pandemic. I
think it puts much more urgency to moving quickly
on the
Global Fund."
The
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
initiated 14 months ago by Kofi Annan, UN secretary
general, has received pledges of $1.9 billion,
including $500 million from the United States.
(The United States also is the world's largest
bilateral AIDS donor, earmarking $790 million
this year, or 44 percent of direct giving to developing
countries.
In
April, the fund's board approved $378 million
over two years for projects, and plans to finance
another $238 million if certain conditions are
met. A WHO estimate has found that about $2.8
billion will be spent this year to fight AIDS.
Annan estimated that $7 billion to $10 billion
needs to be spent annually.
In
the April talk, Gordon also addressed a second
wave of the AIDS pandemic, particularly in India,
China, and Russia. China has an estimated 1 million
cases, which UNAIDS said could grow to 20 million
by 2020. Russia also has more than 1 million people
with HIV or AIDS, and its Health Ministry estimates
that 5 million to 10 million boys and men between
the ages of 15 and 20 will have contracted HIV
or AIDS in five years.
China,
Gordon said, has taken the important step of accepting
that it has a problem. "The focus on AIDS,
far from suggesting bad news, suggests positive
news," he said. But he added, "China
has a long ways to go in acknowledging the scope
of the problem and getting on top of it. "He
said there was "relative cause of optimism"
for Russia, despite its fast-growing rates of
infection. He cited Russia's "high rates
of literacy, extensive media links, active education
program," and older population as factors
that could blunt the impact of HIV or AIDS.
In
Nigeria, however, few analysts believe the very
low reported rates of HIV and AIDS, which range
from 1 percent to 16 percent. The US intelligence
official scoffed at the reported 2 percent infection
rate for Lagos, Nigeria's largest city.
Peter
Piot, the Belgian-born director of UNAIDS, said
last week that the National Intelligence Council
estimates were close to his thinking about the
progression of the disease, especially in Africa.
"When
I look at the epidemic, I see that even southern
Africa has not reached a natural limit,"
he said of the six southern African countries
where more than 20 percent of sexually active
adults are infected with AIDS, including Botswana's
42 percent rate. "In Nigeria and Ethiopia,
there should be the start of massive programs."
More
News
BAMAKO,
28 Jun 2002 (IRIN) - From painkillers to antibiotics,
just about any medicinal drug can be had on the
streets of Mali’s towns and villages. The
process is easy. You simply go up to the vendor
and describe your pains. In a flash, he or she
dives into a plastic bag, whips out a bottle of
pills, reels off its healing properties, hands
it over and pockets your money.
Chances
are the vendors knows absolutely nothing about
the chemicals from which the pills are made, or
about potential side effects since none are pharmacists
not do they have any licenses to sell drugs. Yet,
they and their counterparts elsewhere in West
Africa administer a large percentage (estimates
range from 30 to 60 percent) of the drugs sold
in the subregion.
Pharmacists
in Mali are spearheading a campaign against unlicensed
drugs. “Street drugs kill,” is the
slogan they have been using to make people aware
that such medicines are a major public health
risk.
"These
drugs are a great danger which is tolerated by
the people and the government," says Dr.
Deidia Diallo, president of the Order of Malian
Pharmacists.
Why
the proliferation of unlicensed medicine vendors?
One major argument people put forward is poverty,
says Diallo. They say they have to do something
to earn a livelihood.
"Before,
people would raise the argument of proximity and
accessibility," she adds. "This is no
longer true today. At every corner you have a
drugstore where you can find all kinds of medicines.
Even the price argument is no longer valid because
of generic drugs."
The
drug vendors’ clients think differently.
Street
drugs "are very efficient, cheap and can
be bought even singly", a secondary school
teacher told IRIN. "I use them (street drugs)
whenever someone in my family is sick. Let me
give you an example. My daughter was sick so I
took her to the health centre. The doctor gave
me a prescription that amounted to more than CFA
7,000."
"Do
you know how much I used to cure her? Less than
CFA 1.500 with these people (the vendors)."
A
housewife told IRIN she always bought her drugs
from the same woman. "I don't know where
they get their drugs," she said, "but
you find them with extraordinarily efficient drugs."
The
informal trade in medicinal drugs is anything
but disorganized. Wholesalers smuggle in the drugs
from countries such as Nigeria or Guinea, while
retailers sell them on the street.
"Sometimes
when you go to the pharmacy you don't find some
drugs, but you never have that problem in the
street," says Sadio Samake, a student at
the University of Mali. "You can even buy
a single tablet if you want, which is not possible
in pharmacies," he adds.
For
Dr Abdrahamane Tounkara, secretary-general of
the Ministry of Health, "the regular provision
of drugs is an essential component of a health
care system that works satisfactorily, and their
accessibility is one of the tangible symbols of
the quality of health care”.
He
stresses that it is necessary to make sure people
have easy access to quality drugs at affordable
prices.
This
has been a cornerstone of Mali's public health
policy in recent years, according to the health
authorities. One measure to improve access has
been to allow pharmacists to replace costlier
medicines with cheaper, generic ones as long as
they are also effective.
Twelve
wholesale distributors import generic medicines
into Mali. All such imports are authorised and
controlled by the national drug administration.
Despite
such measures, however, the illicit sale of drugs
has become, within a decade, a major danger for
people's health, according to Diallo.
Drugs,
she says, should be prescribed solely by pharmacists
and only to people with prescriptions. All drugs
sold in Mali, she adds, should be authorised and
checked regularly by the relevant health authority,
as per state regulations.
Diallo
says she is worried by the negative spinoffs of
informal drug vending such as the development
of resistance to antibiotics due to the misuse
of medicines. "I am very serious when I say
that resistance to antibiotics is posing a lot
of public health problems," she says.
Pharmacists
themselves have been accused of encouraging the
illicit market by selling expired medicines to
the street vendors. However, Diallo does not believe
such claims.
"I
don't think someone who has taken an oath would
do that," she says. "Every professional
knows that he or she can be prosecuted by a disciplinary
commission and his/her license can be withdrawn
if found guilty."
A
national commission has been created in Mali to
fight the illicit sale of medicines, but it is
yet to develop its plan of action.
Reference:
The Boston Globe 2002 More AIDS News
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