Asia must deal bravely with HIV/AIDS: U.N. official
By Tan Ee Lyn
HONG KONG (Reuters) - A top U.N. official urged countries in Asia on Thursday to deal squarely and bravely with HIV/AIDS, which he said was being driven dangerously underground because of stigma and conservative attitudes.
"In Papua New Guinea, India, Malaysia where it is driven by injecting drug users, Indonesia, there are pockets of spread but because of stigma, it's all underground," Peter Piot, head of the U.N. AIDS agency UNAIDS, told Reuters in a telephone interview.
"Religion does not protect against AIDS. It's about sex and drugs. They have the means and knowledge, so it's a matter of political will and translating it into more openness about AIDS and having the courage to adopt education and prevention programs to reach those who are marginalized."
Piot, who was in China's northeastern city of Dalian for the World Economic Forum, said rapid economic development in Asia was fuelling the spread of HIV/AIDS.
According to UNAIDS' 2006 report on the incurable disease, 8.3 million people were living with HIV in Asia at the end of 2005.
Some 930,000 people were newly infected with HIV in 2005, a year when AIDS claimed around 600,000 lives. Only 1 in 6 people who need treatment in Asia are receiving it.
"Rapid economic development, societies in very rapid transition, a huge population mobility, a lot of new money, mobile men with money, that increases the risk of HIV in a big way," Piot said.
While governments were beginning to talk seriously about the disease, action was needed and governments needed to face the very groups that they normally shy away from, he added. Continued...

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