People
living with HIV/AIDS need practical measures not just good intentions
to achieve greater involvement
1
December 2004
Ten
years after governments pledged to give people living with HIV/AIDS
a greater say in programmes and policy decisions that affect them,
an alarming number of countries have failed to put in place practical
measures to achieve this goal, the International Federation of Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the Global Network of People
Living with HIV/AIDS (GNP+) said on the occasion of World AIDS Day.
On 1 December 1994, at the Paris AIDS Summit, 42 governments declared
that the principle of ‘greater involvement of people living
with HIV/AIDS (GIPA)’ was critical to the response to the HIV
pandemic. “These governments committed themselves to supporting
full involvement of persons living with HIV/AIDS in the formulation
and implementation of public policies at all levels. Examples from
around the world prove that the first-hand experiences of those living
with the virus are crucial for a successful response to HIV/AIDS,”
Bernard Gardiner, Manager of the Federation’s Global HIV/AIDS
Programme, explains.
“Yet it is evident that not enough has been done to make the
greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS possible at all
levels of HIV/AIDS policy making and programme implementation. We
need to pass from good intentions to practical measures that produce
concrete results,” he adds, recalling that in 2001, at the UN
General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, all governments pledged
to enact, strengthen or enforce as appropriate legislation, regulations
and other measures to eliminate all forms of discrimination against,
and to ensure the full enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental
freedoms by people living with HIV/AIDS.
To mark the tenth anniversary of GIPA, GNP+ and the International
Federation are launching a joint project in which people living with
HIV/AIDS evaluate GIPA in action. The project gives an opportunity
to reflect on the current status of GIPA and what can be done to improve
its implementation. “Conclusions from this joint project confirm
little has changed. We know from last year’s UNAIDS progress
report on meeting the targets set in the Declaration of Commitment
that there are critical weaknesses in national efforts to implement
greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS,” Gardiner
adds.
To make the benefits of GIPA a reality on the ground, Federation and
GNP+ embarked in 2001 on a partnership to reduce stigma and discrimination
at global, regional and national levels through increased and meaningful
involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS in the work of the Federation.
In 2003 the Federation was made a UNAIDS Collaborative Centre in partnership
with GNP+ for this work.
“Constraints to implementing the GIPA principle include lack
of a supportive social and legal environment, high levels of fear
and stigmatisation and lack of commitment from institutions and organizations
that rely on the expertise of people living with HIV/AIDS to include
people living with HIV/AIDS in decision making. We need to copy those
models of meaningful involvement that are successful, like the Global
Fund delegation of the community of people living with the diseases,”
says Stuart Flavell, International Coordinator of GNP+.
For more information on the project, please visit: http://www.gnpplus.net/gipa_in_action.html
For further information, or to set up interviews,
please contact:
Roy Probert, Information Officer
Tel. + 41 22 730 4296 / + 41 79 217 33 86
Duty phone Tel. + 41 79 416 38 81
The Geneva-based International Federation
promotes the humanitarian activities of 178 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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