International
Federation announces new five-year-programme to combat HIV and AIDS
in southern Africa
15
August 2006
The
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies announced
today during the XVI International AIDS Conference in Toronto that
it will launch a new programme, in the coming weeks, to support Red
Cross societies in southern Africa in fighting HIV/AIDS over the next
five years.
“With over 11 million people living with HIV, including 500,000
children, Southern Africa is the epicentre of the pandemic,”says
Françoise Le Goff, Head of the International Federation’s
regional delegation in Harare. With adult prevalence rates now exceeding
20 % in most countries in the region, reaching more than 38 % in some
areas, there is an urgent need to take the Red Cross work to a new
level,” she adds.
The new integrated long-term HIV/AIDS strategy focuses on prevention
for vulnerable groups and support for people living with HIV. It aims
to strengthen home-based care programmes built up over the last decade
using the network of community-based Red Cross volunteers in southern
Africa who provide support services to the chronically ill and family
members. It also targets the growing number of orphans who have lost
one or both parents due to AIDS. Some 225,000 children will be supported
over the next five years.
“The availability of anti-retroviral therapy will change the
shape of home-based care programmes from helping people to die to
positive living,” explains Bernard Gardiner, manager of the
Global HIV/AIDS programme for the International Federation in Geneva.
“Red Cross volunteers have been working door-to-door to protect
human dignity in their own community. We must now scale up and support
these volunteers properly to make sure the most vulnerable have access
to care, prevention and support,” he adds.
Other activities covered in the new programme include increasing the
number of prevention campaigns aimed at high-risk groups (such as
sex workers, truck drivers and out-of-school youth), more involvement
in anti-stigma campaigns to raise public awareness about HIV and AIDS,
strengthening the capacities of National Societies and developing
operational partnerships, including with the networks of people living
with HIV and UN agencies.
“A triple threat facing southern Africa has been identified,”
says Richard Blewitt, Acting Director of the International Federation’s
policy and communications division. “The HIV/AIDS pandemic,
the deteriorating food security situation due to consecutive years
of drought and weakened government capacities require an urgent response.
With more than a decade of experience in home-based care, the Red
Cross in southern Africa can play a crucial role in the fight against
HIV and AIDS as we do in other parts of the continent,” he adds.
A total of 10 countries in the region are covered by the programme
: Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa,
Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
For further information, or to set up interviews,
please contact:
In Toronto :
Angela Hoyt, press officer, Canadian Red Cross, Tel: 00 1 613 222
6196
In Harare
Tapiwa Gomo, regional information officer, Tel: + 263 91 345 936
In Geneva
Jean-Luc Martinage, press officer Tel: + 00 41 79 217 33 86
Duty phone (Out of Hours), Tel: + 00 41 79 416 38 81
The Geneva-based International Federation
promotes the humanitarian activities of 185 National Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies among vulnerable people. By coordinating international
disaster relief and encouraging development support, it seeks to prevent
and alleviate human suffering. The Federation, National Societies
and the International Committee of the Red Cross together, constitute
the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
© International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
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