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Moving
the fight from the boardroom to the ground
IRIN News
May 28, 2009
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84601
The war against HIV/AIDS,
which has too often been fought in plush offices and conference
centres, needs to be reclaimed by people in developing countries,
who are most affected, or it will continue to be a losing battle.
This was the message
from the Global Citizens Summit in Nairobi, Kenya, organized by
international anti-poverty agency ActionAid, and attended by a broad
range of organisations in the field of HIV and AIDS to discuss using
social mobilization to "repackage" the HIV response.
"The fight against
HIV did not originate in boardrooms - in the US, the momentum came
from gay activists propelling HIV onto the national agenda,"
said Leonard Okello, head of ActionAid's global HIV team.
"In Uganda it came
from poor women forming TASO [The AIDS Support Organisation], which
has since grown into a national model for community-based care,
and in Senegal it came from community and religious leaders - it
was citizens rising up to make their voices heard and to put AIDS
on the agenda. We need to go back there."
Participants pointed
out that although community-based organizations did the lion's share
of HIV-care work, they received a fraction of global AIDS funding.
The Bungoma Orphans,
HIV/AIDS and Poverty Organization (BOHAPO), in western Kenya, supports
orphans and widows in the area with food, money for transport to
the hospital, and school uniforms, but has never received any funding
from the government or international NGOs; it relies on the local
community and sporadic individual donations from abroad.
"A lot of HIV money
goes to paying for offices and other administration costs,"
said Edwin Walela, founder of BOHAPO. "It would be better if
that money went straight to helping the widows and orphans - the
government gives them ARVs [antiretrovirals], but then they have
no money to buy food so they are still dying ... they need more
help."
Brian Kagoro, ActionAid's
Pan African policy manager, said it was time donors started directing
funds to where they actually worked and involved people living with
HIV who were often left out of policy discussions about the pandemic.
"We need to stop
chasing the money and let the money chase the people's ideas. We
talk about people being infected and affected by HIV, but we don't
think of them as people with ideas of their own about their condition."
He called for a global
mass movement, built on the resilience and determination of people
living with HIV, to replace "this grasshopper movement that
hops from conference to conference."
Participants also highlighted
the need to put more pressure on governments to make good on their
commitments. "We've stopped expecting our governments to keep
their promises, and so there is no reaction, no anger from us when
they don't," said Salil Shetty, director of the UN Millennium
Campaign. "We need to find that anger and channel it, not to
politics, as we so often do, but to water, to education, to HIV."
He cited the example
of South Africa's Treatment Action Campaign, which used legal advocacy
and grassroots mass-mobilization to get the South African government
to provide free ARV therapy, generic drugs and greater commitment
to the needs of people living with HIV.
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