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LONDON, July 6 (Xinhuanet) -- More than 1.1 million
people were infected with HIV, the virus causing the fatal disease AIDS, in Asia
last year alone, while 38 million living with the virus worldwide, a UN report
said on Tuesday.
Five million new cases were diagnosed last year alone in the world -- the largest number in any one year since the
epidemic began, according to the 2004 Report on the Global AIDS published by the
Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) in advance of the
International AIDS Conference, to be held in Bangkok later this month.
"Despite increased funding, political commitment and
progress in expanding access to HIV treatment over the past two years, the AIDS
epidemic continues to outpace the global response," Peter Piot, Executive
Director of UNAIDS, told a news conference in London.
Efforts needed to be focused in Asia to prevent "a
full blown Aids catastrophe", he said.
According to the report, 1.1 million people in Asia
became infected with HIV last year alone -- more than any previous year.
With 60 percent of the world's population, Asia's
fast-growing epidemic has global implications, the report said.
There is no time to misread the signals, with Asia
facing life and death choices in preventing a full-blown AIDS catastrophe in the
region, Piot said.
Answering questions about Chinese efforts against
AIDS, Piot told Xinhua, "Chinese central government is highly committed to fight
AIDS in the country. The prime minister, Wen Jiabao's visit to AIDS patients
last year is a symbol of it. And it is encouraging that the government provide
free treatment for the poor."
"But the public awareness about AIDS need to be
raised in China.The ordinary should know AIDS is not far from them and the
diseasedoes not emerge in foreign countries only," Piot said.
UNAIDS warned that the stabilization in HIV rates is
actually due to a rise in deaths from Aids in sub-Sahara area where is the most
highly infected region in the world. Last year, three millionpeople died from
Aids across the world.
The report said women and young people are
disproportionately affected by HIV. There are now 13 women infected for every 10
men and women now make up 50 percent of those living with HIV across the world.
UNAIDS also warned the HIV epidemic was continuing to
grow in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, where 1.3 million people were living
with HIV. Russia, which had over 3 million injecting drug users, was one of the
worst affected countries.
UNAIDS is calling for the global funding allocated to
the fightagainst HIV to grow from 5 billion US dollars in 2003 to 20 billion
dollars by 2007. Enditem |