Didier
Cherpitel, Secretary General of the International Federation
and the Director General of the OPEC Fund, Dr. Y. Seyyid Abdulai
sign the agreement that will boost HIV/AIDS programmes in the
Asia-Pacific region (p8538)
Here in Nepal, one of the countries to benefit from the funding of HIV/AIDS programmes in Asia, volunteers are involved in peer education.(p8540)

Didier Cherpitel, Secretary General of the International Federation and the Director General of the OPEC Fund, Dr. Y. Seyyid Abdulai discussing details of what is being described as just the beginning of a new partnership. (p8539)
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Asian HIV/AIDS programmes boosted
by new partnership
12 November 2002
A total of four million dollars
has been committed by the International Federation and the OPEC Fund
for International Development in what is being seen as the start of
a new partnership in combatting HIV/AIDS in Asia Pacific.
The region has one of the highest increases in HIV/AIDS prevalence
rates in the world with more than one million people becoming infected
in 2001. Two Asian countries - China and India - are set to overtake
South Africa as the country with the highest number of people living
with HIV/AIDS.
At a signing ceremony at the International Federation headquarters
in Geneva, the Director General of the OPEC Fund, Dr. Y. Seyyid Abdulai,
emphasised the need to work in partnership in containing the pandemic
which he said was destroying gains made in education, health and infrastructural
development.
"We can't work alone. We need to work with the best institutions,"
he told International Federation Secretary General, Didier Cherpitel,
and a gathering of ambassadors from OPEC and Asian countries as well
as representatives from the two organisations.
The membership of the International Federation, with its network of
97 million volunteers worldwide of which 63 million are in the Asia
Pacific region, he said, would spread the message that will prevent
people becoming infected by the virus. "This is only the beginning,"
he added.
The theme of a sustainable partnership with sustainable progress against
the disease was echoed by Didier Cherpitel. "The only way to
build up sustainable programmes against HIV/AIDS is through communities,"
he said. The network of Red Cross Red Crescent community-based volunteers
are that link with the communities.
The International Federation's agreement with the OPEC Fund is the
latest in a series of partnerships with organisations and corporations
against HIV/AIDS, including Nestlé in Africa.
The money from this agreement will be used to support programmes in
Nepal, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and 11
Pacific countries. Programmes will focus on prevention, care and support
and challenging stigma and discrimation against people living with
HIV/AIDS.
Speaking to the guests gathered at the ceremony today, Dr. Alvaro
Bermejo, the International Federation's head of health and care department,
recounted the story of Patinyha, an HIV positive Thai woman whose
life was turned around after joining a Thai Red Cross supported club
for others in a similar situation. Finding a safe haven where she
met people who understood her enabled Patinyha to live with the virus
and motivated her to join the Red Cross response to HIV/AIDS full-time
as a volunteer. She and her husband work among communities to help
prevent the spread of the disease and to fight stigma and discrimination
and are now providing support across the border in Laos. It is work
at this grassroot level that the joint Federation-OPEC Fund projects
will support and which will make a difference in the long campaign
against the pandemic.
Related links:
International Federation: Reducing
the impact of HIV/AIDS
Asia and the Pacific: appeals updates
and reports
The OPEC Fund
for International Development
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