The president of the United Nations General Assembly sought on Thursday to
break the deadlock over a U.N. declaration on AIDS, with Islamic countries
objecting to empowerment for girls and the United States and others resisting
defining financial targets.
 A sex industry worker
walks by colleagues at a local brothel in Surabaya, Indonesia July 14,
2004. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Wednesday challenged the United
States and Islamic nations to involve prostitutes, drug users and
homosexuals in AIDS treatment programs.
[Reuters] |
Under pressure from more than 800 advocacy groups, some of whom threatened to
leave the conference, Assembly President Jan Eliasson produced a new draft
compromise text to be presented to ministers on Friday.
The three-day conference, which began on Wednesday, is assessing the
worldwide fight against AIDS and is attended by thousands of activists,
ministers and diplomats.
It is aiming to produce a non-binding declaration for use as a guideline for
governments and to spur private groups and businesses into action.
African diplomats have come under particular fire for not insisting on a
strong platform agreed by their leaders in Abuja, Nigeria, in early May and
compromising with Egypt, which has followed the conservative stance of Islamic
nations.
"We are very, very upset and disappointed at the state of the political
declaration," said Olayide Akanni, from Journalists against AIDS Nigeria. Among
the Abuja goals is providing treatment for 80 percent of those infected by 2010.
But Peter Piot, the executive director of UNAIDS, the leading world umbrella
group against the pandemic, said delegates were being more flexible since
Eliasson produced a compromise text.
The United States, backed by Islamic nations, objects to any firm commitments
to international financial goals.
Many delegations, particularly Islamic ones and some conservative Latin
American nations, oppose mentioning prostitutes, drug users and homosexuals in
the declaration.
They prefer citing "vulnerable" groups, fearing that specific mention would
endorse these groups. Also in dispute are rights for girls and sex education,
among other issues.
"Adolescent girls may become an extinct species in some countries," Piot
said, pointing to the rapid increase of AIDS among teenagers, many of them
married.
Adrienne Germain, president of the International Women's Health Coalition,
said the Eliasson text was an improvement but still needed work. In particular
it did not empower girls, a term usually applied to females under 18 years of
age, and "that is not acceptable."
According to a UNAIDS report released on Tuesday, the spread of the pandemic
had slowed but drug treatment is only available to less than half of those
infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
The last such declaration in 2001 spelled out targets clearly, such as the
number of pregnant women and a percentage of those infected who should get drug
treatment.
Most of the goals were not met except for financial expenditures for the
developing world, which reached $8.3 billion in 2005, with the United States
donating more than any other nation.