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The Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) welcomes the appointments of Ms Barbara Hogan as the Minister of Health and Dr Molefi Sefularo as the Deputy Minister of Health. We congratulate President Motlanthe for making these excellent appointments.
We are confident that Hogan has the ability to improve the South African health system. She has been one of the few Members of Parliament to speak out against AIDS denialism and to offer support to the TAC, even during the worst period of AIDS denialism by former President Thabo Mbeki and former Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang. 0n 14 February 2003, she received the TAC memorandum to President Mbeki for a treatment plan. She was removed as Finance Portfolio Chairperson by Mbeki in part for her stand on HIV/AIDS. She has a reputation for being hard-working, competent and principled.
Hogan has a long record of struggle for human rights. Twenty-seven
years ago, she was detained and tortured by the apartheid security
Police. She was tried for treason as an ANC member and spent eight
years in prison.
Dr Sefularo, during his tenure as MEC for Health of North West
Province, supported ARV rollout and the implementation of the
Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT) in the province.
There are tremendous challenges ahead for Hogan and
Sefularo. The inequalities of the apartheid system, the HIV epidemic
and the utterly disastrous reign of Tshabalala-Msimang have left the
health system in a parlous state. Hogan's biggest challenges will be to
meet the treatment and prevention targets of the HIV/AIDS National
Strategic Plan, integrate TB and HIV treatment, develop a feasible
human resources plan for health workers and undo the considerable
legacy of AIDS denialism left by her predecessor. The TAC will do all
that it can to assist her and the Department of Health to meet these
challenges.
Over two million South Africans died of AIDS
during the presidency of Thabo Mbeki. At least 300,000 deaths could
have been avoided had the president merely met the most basic
constitutional requirements. Instead Mbeki and his health minister
pursued a policy of politically supported AIDS denialism and undermined
the scientific governance of medicine. Many more people would have died
had it not been for the campaign for treatment and the independence of
our courts, which ultimately forced Mbeki and Tshabalala-Msimang to
implement an HIV treatment plan. We believe that the period of
politically supported AIDS denialism has ended with the appointment of
the Minister of Health.
We congratulate Hogan and Sefularo and wish them the best. Aluta continua!
(TAC pressrelease - September 25)
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