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Africa opts for stronger Abuja agreement over UN deal
NEW YORK, 2 June (PLUSNEWS) - African delegations in New York on
Friday said an agreement they reached last month in Nigeria would
remain the cornerstone of the continent's struggle against the
pandemic, rather than a new UN declaration on HIV/AIDS generally
perceived as weak.
"We see this [UN declaration] as a compromise document, and in a
compromise document you can't get everything you want," said Tens
Kapoma, Zambia's ambassador to the UN, "but we would have been happier
if it had been stronger."
The three-day UN High Level Meeting on AIDS in New York, reviewing
progress on achieving commitments agreed at the UN General Assembly
Special Session (UNGASS) on HIV/AIDS in 2001, has already been
condemned by civil society activists for failing to set the bar higher
by including new targets and timeframes on treatment, care and
prevention.
African countries had negotiated a far more defined and
comprehensive set of goals last month in Abuja, Nigeria, in preparation
for the UN meeting. It was the culmination of a process in which
HIV/AIDS had become "internalised" by African leaders and institutions,
said one senior UN official.
He added that there was a "disconnect" among New York-based African
diplomats, who helped to negotiate the new UN declaration, and the
"realities on the ground" on the continent, where African leaders were
no longer shying away from action and the protection of vulnerable
groups like women and girls, sex workers and migrant populations.
"The Abuja document was much stronger and more focused than this
document," commented Alloys Orago of Kenya's AIDS Control Council and
Office of the President. "For the first time there was a lot of
commitment from African heads of state and governments on what needs to
be done."
While the UN meeting was seen by many as a missed opportunity to set
performance goals and include language that acknowledges the needs of
specific marginalised groups, some delegations expressed satisfaction
with the text.
Sikelela Dlamini, adviser to Swaziland's executive monarch King
Dlamini III, said the declaration thrashed out this week did not need
to include targets, as those were present in the original 2001
document. "It's almost the same thing as the Abuja agreement," he
commented, "it's complementary."
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