HIV/AIDS in Africa:
Time to Stop the Killing Fields
Volume 6, Number 15
April 2001
By Chinua Akukwe and Melvin Foote, Constituency for Africa
Editors:
Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha
Honey (IPS)
 
15ifhivafrica.pdf
Key Points
- Africa accounts for 70% of all HIV/AIDS cases in the world although
it represents only 10% of the global population. More than 25 million
Africans live with HIV/AIDS, and 17 million have already died.
- The response of the international community has been slow and largely
ineffective.
- The UN estimates that Africa will need $3 billion just for basic treatment
and prevention programs, yet the U.S. and other Western countries donated
only $300 million in assistance in 2000.
According to the UN Agency for HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), 25.3 million Africans
live with the virus or are dying of AIDS. Barring a miracle or a major
change in international attention to the scourge, these Africans will
die within the next decade.
Despite the horrors of the pandemic, the international response has
been limited and only recently have most African governments begun to
publicly address the problem. African governments are hobbled by poverty,
cultural taboos about sex, and misperceptions about the cause and seriousness
of AIDS. They also fear disruption of precious tourism and investment
dollars from the West and have failed to warn their citizens about the
dangers of AIDS. Western nations, including the U.S., have largely ignored
the dangers and international repercussions of widespread infection in
Africa. The United States in 2000 spent only $300 million for basic AIDS
care and prevention programs in Africafar short of the $3 billion
regarded as necessary to slow down the pandemic.
The HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa is of the gravest magnitude. Every day,
6,700 families lose a loved one to the disease; the construction and sale
of coffins is one of the fastest growing occupations in southern Africa.
Sixteen African countries have one-tenth or more of their population infected
with HIV, and Africa is home to 95% of all mother-to-child transmissions
of HIV. In these countries, almost 80% of all deaths of young adults aged
25-45 will be directly linked to AIDS.
In six countries of southern Africa, by the year 2005, AIDS will claim
the lives of between 8 and 25% of todays active physicians. Women
are affected more by this dreaded disease; in Africa, 12 women have HIV/AIDS
for every 10 men. African women account for 85% of all global female infections.
In southern Africa, one in four women aged 15-49 live with HIV/AIDS. In
some countries, between 10 and 20% of teen-age girls are already infected.
Infected girls are more likely than boys to drop out of school, reversing
decades of slow but steady progress in female education. The much-vaunted
African extended family system is faltering, as the number of orphans
living without the care of extended families rises. By the year 2010,
the projected number of orphans may exceed 40 million in Africa.
Africas hard-won health and education gains in the 1960s and 1970s
were undermined by debt and by externally dictated structural adjustment
policies in the 1980s and 1990s. Today, however, social services and economies
are imploding from the deadly consequences of AIDS. In the coming decades,
the continent will record significantly sharper declines in life expectancy
rates and shrinkage of national economies from the effects of the epidemic.
Africans living with HIV/AIDS have limited or no access to lifesaving
anti-retroviral medicines that have changed the course and management
of AIDS in Western countries. Less than one-tenth of one percent of Africans
living with AIDS have access to AIDS drugs. The World Bank estimates that
half of all Africans live on $0.65 cents per day. The economic resources
of African governments are equally meager, and they are burdened by $20
billion in annual foreign debt payments. With the rudimentary healthcare
infrastructure of African countries, the strain of long-term hospitalization
of AIDS patients is taking a heavy toll.
Economic underdevelopment and Africas impoverished conditions
have created a wide-open gateway for HIV infection, tuberculosis (TB),
and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). According to the World Health
Organization, an estimated 30-50% of all TB patients in Africa are also
infected with HIV/AIDS. Africa has the highest rates of STDs in the world.
STDs facilitate the spread of HIV infection, especially among women.
Political instability and violent conflicts keep many African governments
from focusing on the AIDS crisis. Twenty of the continents 53 countries
are involved in intrastate or interstate conflicts, which lead to having
the worlds largest regional concentration of refugees. Another important
factor in the deepening crisis is the high rate of AIDS within Africas
armed forces15-20% of the members of the military in some countries
have AIDS. Mobility of the African male populationsthrough military
operations, migrant labor such as mine workers, and shifts from rural
to urban centersexacerbates the spread of HIV/AIDS. As the HIV/AIDS
pandemic continues, political and social instability will likely intensify
as AIDS gobbles up scarce human and economic resources.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- The U.S. has not provided global leadership on access to AIDS drugs
for Africa and has not supported Africa’s demand to purchase or produce
generic drugs.
- The U.S. 2001 budget for fighting AIDS in Africa is about $460 million,
but much more is needed.
- The U.S. has yet to assert its influence at the World Bank and the
IMF to put more resources in Africa and to cancel external debts.
Whether someone lives or dies of AIDS depends largely on where she or
he lives. Despite the availability of drugs to treat AIDS, millions of
Africans will die because they do not have access to AIDS drugs. In the
U.S. and other Western nations, such drugs have helped AIDS to become
a disease that can be managed and for which effective care is available.
Confronting the AIDS emergency, African governments are demanding that
pharmaceutical companies directly provide AIDS drugs at deep discounts,
or at the very least not oppose compulsory licensing and parallel import
arrangements. Compulsory licensing is an international trade mechanism
by which countries can instruct a patent holder to license the right to
use this patent to any national company or government agency. Parallel
importing describes a practice whereby a country imports goods for resale
without authorization from the original seller. (See Robert Weissman,
Facilitating Access to
Essential Medicines, FPIF, February 2001.) This struggle became
heated with the court battle between the government of South Africa and
39 drug companies. The companies contended that a new law would allow
the South African government to ignore international patent law.
Under mounting international pressure, the pharmaceutical industry dropped
its suit, and has promised to facilitate the flow of low-priced AIDS-treatment
pharmaceuticals. But this issue will not go away, because even lower priced
drugs will still be out of reach for most Africans, and the pharmaceutical
industry remains committed to strong international patent protection and
to staving off the production of generic medicines for the treatment of
AIDS and other illnesses.
The U.S and its Western allies have failed to provide significant funds
to fight AIDS in Africa. In 2001, the wealthiest nation on earth is spending
only $460 million dollars to fight the biggest medical and humanitarian
emergency of our time. The United Nations estimates that at least $10
billion will be needed to fight AIDS in Africa. A group of Harvard researchers,
economists, and scientists recommended that, at bare minimum, the U.S.
should spend $1.5 billion a year to fight AIDS in Africa.
Fortunately, U.S. policymakers are responding to such public pressure
with increased allocations. The U.S. Senate, for example, recently approved
a $700 million increase in proposed spending over the next two years to
fight AIDS in poor countries. However, much more needs to be done.
In another major issue confronting Africa, U.S policymakers have not
squared up to their responsibility. Africa owes foreign banks and governments
about $350 billion. These debts are controversial and a major hindrance
to an adequate African response to AIDS. Every year, Africa spends roughly
$20 billion on debt repaymentmore than the combined continental
outlay for healthcare and education. At least 23 African countries spend
more money on debt repayment than they spend for healthcare. The International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank have yet to effect significant
debt cancellation for African nations despite widespread pressure from
international citizen movements and from the G8, the forum of the worlds
wealthiest nations. The U.S., which is the largest shareholder in these
two international financial institutions, has yet to demand debt cancellation
for Africa.
The policy problems that contribute to the AIDS crisis in Africa extend
beyond Washington and other international donors. Until recently, African
leaders have largely ignored the pandemic. Even today, very few African
nations match their AIDS rhetoric with commensurate budget allocations.
Uganda and Senegal are prominent exceptions.
Senegal, through a combination of political will, prudent budget allocations,
and massive mobilization has kept its rate of infection to less than one
percent. Ugandan President Yoweri Musuveni, recognizing the gravity of
the AIDS pandemic, mobilized his people to modify risky behaviors and
to come forward for testing and counseling. The rate of AIDS in Uganda
is down to about 8%, from a high of 16% in the early 1990s.
Despite the laudable efforts of Uganda and Senegal, corruption and the
squandering of scarce national resources continue. Government spending
on wars, white elephant projects, and persecution of political and economic
opponents is still rife across the continent.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- The U.S should lead other rich nations in supplying essential medicines
to Africans living with AIDS, and devote significantly more resources
to fighting AIDS in Africa.
- The U.S should lead the fight for debt relief for African nations
and ensure that the savings go into AIDS relief and other healthcare
programs.
- The U.S and other rich nations should work with African governments
to create an environment conducive to AIDS relief on the continent.
The immediate goal of a reinvigorated U.S policy should be the dismantling
of all legal and logistic obstacles to the provision of affordable drugs
to all Africans living with AIDS. The developed nations, led by the U.S.,
should rise in unison and make a simple pledge: No African Man, Woman,
Child, or Infant Should Be Denied Access to Lifesaving AIDS Drugs, by
December 2002.
As the leading global democracy, the U.S. should democratize access
to essential AIDS medicines for poor nations. We commend the Bush administration
for maintaining President Clintons executive order on flexible access
to AIDS drugs for poor nations. However, the U.S. needs to do more. The
U.S. should ensure that the World Trade Organization (WTO) implements
a flexible interpretation of the Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights
Agreement (TRIPS), thereby allowing poor nations facing the AIDS emergency
to provide cheap AIDS drugs to their citizens. The U.S. and its allies
should also ensure that all WTO rulings reflect a sound public health
framework to ensure that the goal of unencumbered trade does not create
adverse health consequences in poor nations.
The U.S. government should work more closely with the pharmaceutical
companies to ensure that all obstacles to speedy and effective delivery
of AIDS medicines to poor nations are eliminated. These obstacles include:
(1) the concerns of pharmaceutical companies about possible parallel imports
of cheap AIDS drugs into the lucrative Western markets by poor nations;
(2) the concerns of citizen advocates and AIDS activists that access to
AIDS drugs should not come under the purview of market forces and restrictive
patent laws; and, (3) the concerns of African governments that they should
have the exclusive prerogative to determine national emergencies and possible
remedial actions. Washington should also work to persuade U.S. multinational
companies doing business in Africa to provide AIDS prevention and treatment
programs for their workers and family members.
The U.S. should devote more resources to fighting AIDS in Africa. America
has always responded to major humanitarian needs, whether in Europe, Asia,
or Latin America. It is time to spend readily available resources to stop
AIDS in Africa. Harvard researchers estimated that a scaled-up U.S. response
of $1.5 billion would cost about $5 a year per American. Doubling such
a commitment would cost each American about $10 a yeara commitment
well worth making, considering the magnitude of the crisis and its long-term
implications for global peace and development.
It is not likely that other rich nations will spend significantly more
money on AIDS without a serious commitment from the United States. The
Constituency for Africa (CFA), under the leadership of former Congressman
Ron Dellums, proposed a HIV/AIDS Marshall Plan for Africa with significant
public- and private-sector funds to fight the disease. As a result, Congress,
in August 2000, passed Public Law 106-264, the Global AIDS and Tuberculosis
Relief Act of 2000, sponsored by Jim Leach, R-Iowa and Barbara Lee, D-California,
that earmarked $150 million dollars for each of the fiscal years 2001
and 2002, for a Trust Fund. The Trust Fund will be used to leverage funds
from multilateral development banks like the World Bank and to encourage
similar commitments from other Western donors. The Trust Fund will also
fund the implementation of specific HIV/AIDS programs in Africa. President
Clinton signed the bill into law, as a modest start to what promises to
be a long journey.
The U.S. should use its significant leverage in the G8, the IMF, and
the World Bank to provide debt relief for African nations. The U.S. has
the excellent opportunity at the G8 summit, in July 2001, to persuade
its allies to forgive the debt of African nations, on the condition that
African governments plow back such savings into verifiable investments
in AIDS prevention and treatment programs and other healthcare services.
The U.S. government is not the major holder of African debtit is
owed about $360 million out of the estimated $350 billion in controversial
debtsbut the U.S. has the moral, economic, and political leverage
to advance a genuine debt relief agenda among its allies. Washington should
also work with African leaders and their peoples to ensure a concerted
and consistent focus on the AIDS epidemic. Without dictating their actions,
the U.S should work with African governments to ensure movement in the
following areas: (1) allocation of more money by African nations to fight
AIDS; (2) sustained political reforms to encourage pluralistic political
and multi-sector campaigns against AIDS; (3) end corrupt practices that
siphon foreign aid and investments; and, (4) encourage the emergence of
more civil society involvement in politics and non-government programs
at community levels.
The international community led by the U.S. should not turn its back
on 25 million Africans living under a death sentence. The international
cooperation that has fought against oppression and tyranny since World
War II should not permit the AIDS killing fields to continue in Africa.
A strong case can be made that the AIDS pandemic in Africa represents
a direct threat to U.S. national interests and national security because
of associated political instability, economic downturn, and the intercontinental
spread of infectious diseases. In the end, however, U.S. citizens and
U.S. policymakers face a moral imperative and should ask: Have we done
all we can to save 25 million fellow human beings from an avoidable death?
Melvin Foote is President/CEO of the Constituency for Africa (CFA),
a Washington, DC advocacy organization. CFA is promoting an AIDS Marshall
Plan for Africa. Chinua Akukwe <cakukwe@att.net>
is a board member of Constituency for Africa, and Adjunct Professor at
George Washington University School of Public Health.
|
Disproportionate
Impact of HIV/AIDS
|
|
Indicator
|
Africa
|
Outside Africa
|
| % world population (2000) |
10%
|
90%
|
| % adults living with HIV infection (2000) |
70%
|
30%
|
| % children living with HIV/AIDS infections (2000) |
80%
|
20%
|
| % females living with HIV infections (2000) |
85%
|
15%
|
| % dead of AIDS (since early 1980s) |
79%
|
21%
|
| % maternal-to-infant transmission (since early
1980s) |
95%
|
5%
|
|
% AIDS orphans (since early 1980s)
|
92%
|
8%
|
| Sources:
AIDS Epidemic Update: December 2000 (Geneva: UNAIDS and World
Health Organization, 2000); Special Session of the General Assembly
on HIV/AIDS. Report of the Secretary-General. February 16, 2001 (New
York: United Nations General Assembly, 2001). |
Sources for More Information
Organizations
Constituency for Africa (CFA)
2400 N Street, NW, Suite 510
Washington, DC 20037
Phone: (202) 371-0588
Fax: (202) 371-9017
Email: cakukwe@att.net
Website: http://www.cfanet.org/
UNAIDS
Switzerland
Email: unaids@unaids.org
Website: http://www.unaids.org/
United Nations
Dag Hammarskjold Plaza
New York, New York 10017
Voice: (212) 963-1234
Website: http://www.un.org/
World Heath Organization
Switzerland
Email: info@who.int
Website: http://www.who.int/
Publications
Chinua Akukwe, AIDS and Men: Taking Risks or Taking Responsibility?
Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health, March
2000, 120 (1).
Chinua Akukwe, Africas HIV/AIDS Dilemma, The Washington
Times, November 26, 2000.
Chinua Akukwe, HIV/AIDS in African Children: A Major Calamity
that Deserves Urgent Global Action, Journal of HIV/AIDS Prevention
and Education for Adolescents and Children, 1999, 3 (3).
Chinua Akukwe, The Need for an Urban HIV/AIDS Policy in the United
States, Journal of Health and Social Policy, 2001, 12 (3).
Gro Harlem Brundtland, Affordable AIDS Drugs are Within Reach,
The International Herald Tribune, February 14, 2001. Dr. Brundtland
is the Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO).
Melvin Foote and Chinua Akukwe, Clintons Visit to Nigeria:
HIV/AIDS Should be at the Top of the Agenda, The Constituency
for Africa Policy Brief, August 2000, Washington, DC.
Melvin Foote and Chinua Akukwe, The Gains of the 13th International
AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa, Africa Economic Analysis,
August 2000. Available at http://www.afbis.com/.
FPIF Editors, Citizens-Based Global Affairs Agenda: Democratizing
Access to Essential Medicines, Foreign Policy in Focus, March
2001. Available at http://www.fpif.org/cgaa/pharma.html.
Uwe Friesecke, Globalization Left a Suffering Africa, Paper
presented at the January 2001 Conference on Peace through Development
along the Nile Valley, Khartoum, Sudan, and reported in www.members.tripod.com,
accessed March 2001.
General Accounting Office, Global Health: U.S. Agency for International
Development Fights AIDS in Africa, but Better Data Needed to Measure Impact,
GAO-01-449, Washington, DC, 2001.
Jeffrey Sachs, A Global Fund for the Fight Against AIDS,
The Washington Post, Saturday, April 7, 2001.
UNAIDS and World Health Organization, AIDS Epidemic Update: December
2000, Geneva, Switzerland, 2000.
United Nations, Special Session of the General Assembly on HIV/AIDS,
Report of the Secretary General, UN General Assembly, New York, February
16, 2001.
Robert Weissman, AIDS and Developing Countries: Democratizing
Access to Essential Medicines, Foreign Policy in Focus, Volume
4, Number 23, August 1999. Available at http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol4/v4n23aids.html.
Robert Weissman, AIDS and Developing Countries: Facilitating Access
to Essential Medicines, Foreign Policy in Focus, Volume 6,
Number 6, February 2001. Available at http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol6/v6n06aids.html.
World Bank, Can Africa Claim the 21st Century? Washington, DC,
2000.
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