The Executive Director of the Joint (UNAIDS) Michel Sidibé |
Maputo, Mozambique, 2 September 2011
The Executive Director of the Joint United Nations
Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) Michel Sidibé and Mozambique’s Minister
of Youth and Sports Pedrito Caetano launched the UNAIDS Give AIDSthe Red
Card initiative today at the Joaquim Chissano International Conference
Center in Maputo. The announcement was made on the eve of the 10th
All-Africa Games, the continent’s largest multi-sports tournament, under
the patronage of Dr. Aires Aly Bonifácio, Prime Minister of
Mozambique.
Mozambique.
“Reducing the numbers of new HIV infections is
nowhere more imperative or urgent than in Africa,” said Mr Sidibé. “The
All-Africa Games are a great occasion to raise wide awareness about
intensifying efforts to reach UNAIDS’ vision of Zero new infections,
Zero discrimination, and Zero AIDS-related deaths.”
“Sport brings people together and is
especially popular among young people. I urge all the participants and
fans across Africa watching the All-Africa Games to learn the facts
about HIV prevention and give AIDS the Red Card,” said Mr Caetano.
Among prominent personalities expected to
attend the launch are former Mozambican President Joaquim Alberto
Chissano, Graça Machel, wife of former South African President Nelson
Mandela, and leading athletes.
The UNAIDS Give AIDS the Red Card campaign was
introduced at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa with the support
of 28 team captains. Captains of six teams at the 2011 FIFA Women’s
World Cup in Germany also endorsed the initiative.
At the Maputo event, the first Africa-wide
launch of the initiative, the heads of national delegations to the
Games, including presidents of National Olympic Committees and Ministers
of Sport from 47 participating countries, are signing a pledge to
support the Give AIDS the Red Card campaign for Zero new infections,
Zero discrimination, and Zero AIDS-related deaths.
The campaign aims to raise awareness and mobilize
action to strengthen the response to HIV and accelerate progress across
Africa.
“By
signing the pledge, each delegation is agreeing to set up a national
plan of action on the UNAIDS Give AIDS the Red Card in consultation with
UNAIDS offices and national AIDS councils upon return in their
respective countries,” said Dr. Djibril Diallo, Senior Adviser to the
UNAIDS Executive Director. “The 2012 Africa Cup of Nations hosted by
Equatorial Guinea and Gabon will be the next platform for pan-African
mobilization of the initiative,” he added.
Mozambicans are welcoming 5,000 athletes who
will compete in 23 sports during the Games, including: badminton,
basketball, boxing, canoeing, chess, cycling, football, gymnastics,
handball, judo, karate, netball, rowing, sailing, shooting, swimming,
taekwondo, tennis, triathlon, volleyball and weightlifting.
Sub-Saharan Africa continues to be the region
most affected by HIV, with an estimated 22.5 million people living with
the virus in the region representing 68% of the global total. However
significant progress is being made in the region. In 22 countries, the
HIV incidence rate declined by more than 25% between 2001 and 2009.
World
leaders meeting in New York at the 2011 UN High-Level Meeting on AIDS
agreed on far-reaching targets to halve new infections through sexual
transmission and drug use, eliminate new HIV infections among children,
and reduce TB-related AIDS deaths by half—all by 2015. The Political
Declaration on HIV/AIDS also urged countries to embrace treatment for
prevention, put 15 million people on treatment and reinforced the call
for universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support by
2015.
Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of UNAIDS.
Contact
UNAIDS New York | Nicholas N. Gouede | tel. +1 646 666 8017 | mob. +258 840
488 971 (Maputo) |
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