World Marks International AIDS Day
December 01, 2005
An AIDS awareness poster in Dushanbe reads "Save us from this misery" (RFE/RL)
1 December 2005 -- Today is the 18th annual World AIDS Day, designed to highlight the global struggle against HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths.
In a message to mark the day, Peter Piot, executive director of the United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, said that in 2005, the number of people living with HIV reached its highest level ever -- an estimated 40.3 million people, nearly half of them women.
Piot said that with the world now 25 years into the AIDS epidemic, the lessons are clear: countries that make investments in HIV prevention, and the treatment and care of people with the disease, are able to reverse the spread of AIDS.
Piot called on all UN member countries to adhere to their commitments to prevent the spread of the disease.
In a report released last month, the UN said AIDS was continuing to spread in Russia, Ukraine, Central Asia countries, and Iran. The report said an estimated 1.6 million people in Eastern Europe and Central Asia are now living with HIV, most in Russia and Ukraine.
(AFP/Reuters)