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£20m
for Zimbabwe Aids programme
BBC News
October 12, 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6041728.stm
Britain has awarded £20 million to a programme aimed at fighting
Zimbabwe's HIV and Aids epidemic. The
cash will be used to provide testing and counselling services and
encourage safe sex, the Department for International Development
said.
The scheme will
distribute more than 250 million condoms, including female ones,
through 700 hair salons. Zimbabwe has one of the highest HIV rates
in the world, with one in five adults infected. The funding is being
given to Population
Services International, a US-based non-governmental organisation
which will run the five-year programme. The scheme will be co-funded
by the US Agency for International Development.
It is hoped
more than a million Zimbabweans who are unaware they are HIV positive
will be helped by the scheme. A national campaign will also be launched
aimed at breaking down the stigma around Aids. It
will include workers visiting villages around the country to educate
residents using games and music.
International
Development Secretary Hilary Benn said: "People should not
die because they have sex."By
giving them the knowledge and the means to protect themselves we
can save many lives. "That's
why we're helping to make HIV prevention services more accessible
to more people. "There
has been progress in Zimbabwe over the last few years, with the
HIV rate falling, particularly amongst vulnerable young women. "By
continuing to get the right message across we can build towards
our goal of an Aids-free generation."
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