|
 Chinese President Hu Jintao (2nd,
L) shakes hands with an AIDS patient in a Beijing hospital on Nov. 30,
2004. (Xinhua Photo) |

President Hu shakes hands with medical
staff. (Xinhua Photo) |
 President Hu shakes hands with medical staff. (Xinhua
Photo)
|
BEIJING, Nov. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- On the eve of
the World AIDS Day, Chinese President Hu Jintao shook hands with AIDS patients
in a Beijing hospital Tuesday afternoon, giving a mighty push to the country's
intensified battle against the killer disease.
"Both the government and society will truly care
about you and help you in an all-out manner. I hope you will further enhance
your confidence and courage to combat and overcome the disease," Hu told the
AIDS patients while shaking hands with them at BeijingYou'an Hospital.
During his one-hour stay at the hospital, Hu, wearing
a red silk ribbon symbolizing love and care on his chest, visited two AIDS wards
and reached out for handshakes with the patients insideas soon as he entered the
rooms. When he left, he shook hands withthe patients again and wished them an
early recovery.
The AIDS patients, who looked a bit nervous at the
very beginning, eased up when a smiling Hu started chatting with them
face-to-face, and told the president about their treatment and family conditions
in details.
"After my handshake with the president, I feel AIDS
is no longer so terrible, and I'm convinced that AIDS patients can also lead a
life as normal as that of all others," said one patient whoasked to be
identified only by his surname Wei. A pig raiser in north China's Shanxi
Province, 40-year-old Wei tested HIV positiveseven years ago.
Hu's move, which came one year after Premier Wen
Jiabao's landmark handshake with three hospitalized AIDS patients in Beijing on
last year's World AIDS Day, gave a clear and strong signal that the top
leadership's is committed to curb the spread of AIDS and dispel social
discrimination against HIV/AIDS victims.
"We're thrilled by the Chinese president so clearly
showing to all the provinces, cities, counties and officials that we need to
deal with HIV/AIDS," said Henk Bekedam, representative of the World Health
Organization (WHO) in China, after learning the news.
"Political commitment is very necessary and the
handshaking gives a signal to leaders at all levels of the country," he
added."We are excited and happy to see it happen in China."
Ken Legins, HIV/AIDS project officer with the UNICEF
Office forChina, also hailed (the Chinese leaders') "examples to (other) leaders
in the world in AIDS prevention."
Following Premier Wen's highly-acclaimed handshake
last December, AIDS prevention and the welfare of HIV/AIDS victims, once a
largely-neglected and even taboo topic for many Chinese officials, has attracted
much attention from both central and local governments.
The latest statistics showed that China's central
budget for AIDS control and prevention had soared to 390 million yuan (47
million US dollars) in 2003 from a mere 15 million yuan (1.8 million dollars) in
2001. The increased fund was used in newly-launched government projects that
provide free HIV/AIDS test for citizens, free treatment for poor HIV carriers
and AIDS patients, as well as clean syringes and drug substitutes for drug
addicts.
In Henan Province, where farmers in dozens of
villages contracted HIV/AIDS in groups as a result of contaminated blood
selling, provincial officials were dispatched to live in those so-called "AIDS
villages" and help villagers get timely treatment andassistance.
Reflecting heightened public awareness of the AIDS
menace, hugebillboards on AIDS prevention were erected last week in Sanlitun,
the famous "bar street" or night life haunt for local youngsters and foreigners
in the Chinese capital Beijing, while an increasingnumber of Chinese
universities and colleges opened their campus tosex education, AIDS lectures and
free condom distribution.
"The social environment for the HIV/AIDS victims is
turning forthe better, as we are seeing less discrimination from the general
public," said Li Xiang, 28, an HIV carrier who initiated the Beijing-based
Mangrove Support Group Project to provide care and support for people like him.
A three-day small exhibition featuring artistic works
by HIV/AIDS victims attracted more than 300 visitors in Beijing earlier this
month, and some visitors even expressed the wish to buy and take back home the
paintings by HIV carriers.
Nevertheless, the Chinese president conceded that the
country "is still facing a grave situation" in AIDS control and prevention when
he met with local medical workers and volunteers engaged in the fight against
AIDS Tuesday at You'an Hospital.
China, which reported its first AIDS case in 1985,
now has an estimated 840,000 HIV carriers and AIDS patients. But United Nations
health officials warned this week that the disease was spreading from
traditionally "high-risk groups," such as sex workers, drug users and male
having sex with male, to the "generalpopulation" in this country of 1.3 billion.
Both the Communist Party of China and the whole
society "need to make further efforts" to effectively curb the spread of
HIV/AIDS, Hu, also general secretary of the Party Central Committee, gave the
call during the meeting with the hospital staff and volunteers.
Also on Tuesday, 100,000 "textbooks on AIDS control
and prevention" specially compiled for Party and government officials were
distributed to all 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities across
the country.
"I think President Hu's move will make leading
officials of Party committees and governments at all levels fully realize
theirresponsibility in AIDS control and prevention," said Zhao Pengfei,WHO's
AIDS project officer in China. Enditem |