LUANDA, July 8 (Xinhua) -- Stephen Lewis, the special
representative of UN secretary general on AIDS, has called for the provision of
anti-retroviral therapy for AIDS sufferers in Mozambique, according to a report
reaching here from Maputo on Saturday.
Speaking at a press conference
in Maputo on Friday, he said that the government's target is 55,000 people on
anti-retrovirals by the end of the year. However, so far there are only between
25,000 and 28,000 people undergoing treatment, so it means this figure should be
doubled in six months.
He warned that the HIV/AIDS pandemic has thrust
Mozambique "into a grave crisis" unless it is treated as an emergency, "there
will be a terrible price to pay."
Lewis has spent the past week in Mozambique and
reached the conclusion that the provision of anti-retroviral therapy for AIDS
sufferers must be rapidly increased.
The UN envoy said "the government must move heaven
and earth to roll out treatment in these next six months."
The key to meeting the target, he argued, was to
ensure that treatment is available throughout the country, and not simply
concentrated in Maputo.
By the end of the year, the Health Ministry hopes to
ensure that anti-retroviral therapy is available in at least three districts in
each of the ten provinces.
Lewis noted that women are disproportionately at risk
from the epidemic, a fact brutally illustrated during his visit to the central
city of Beira. Enditem