BEIJING, Dec. 2 (Xinhua) -- Members of public,
celebrities and condom manufacturers embarked on a "Great AIDS Walk" at the
Great Wall on a chilly Sunday morning to generate funds for the country's fight
against HIV/AIDS and raise public awareness of the disease.
The four-kilometer walk at Juyongguan Great Wall,
jointly organized by UNAIDS and China Red Cross Foundation and with the support
of the Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria (GBC), attracted
more than 2,000 people.
Joining the public were health officials,
international organization representatives, NGOs, 1960s ping-pong world champion
Zhuang Zedong, Miss China International, foreigners and private sector sponsors.
Volunteers, most college students, decorated their
clothes with blown-up condoms while handing out condoms to passers-by, and
children enjoyed themselves by ballooning condoms. Health Minister Chen Zhu
warned last week, "Sex has become the main channel of contracting HIV in China."
Su Juxiang, vice-president of the Red Cross Society
of China (RCSC), said at the foot of the Great Wall that the RCSC, as a
non-governmental organization that played an increasingly important role in
China, would be "committed" to the "humanitarian control and prevention of
AIDS".
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More than 2,000 people, both Chinese and
foreigners, take part in the"Great AIDS Walk"at the Great Wall in Beijing
yesterday to generate funds for the country's fight against HIV/AIDS and
raise public awareness.(Xinhua Photo)
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"AIDS is a strategic issue concerning the rise and
fall of the nation," said Su.
By the end of October 2007, a total of 223,501 people
had been officially reported to have contracted HIV, including 62,838 AIDS
patients, according to an appraisal report by the Ministry of Health, the World
Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS.
Southwest China's Yunnan Province, the hardest-hit
place by the disease, has nearly a quarter of the country's total HIV carriers,
a large proportion of whom contracted the virus by sharing intravenous drug
needles.
Though the rate of AIDS growth has slowed, the
government has admitted the situation "remains grave" in a country with a
population of 1.3 billion. Official reports say there are estimated to be as
many as 700,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in China.
Khalid Malik, UN Resident Coordinator in China, said
discrimination was the biggest challenge faced by the fight against the disease,
but Chinese leaders including Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao had vowed to eliminate
discrimination, as shown by the theme of this year's World AIDS Day --
"leadership"-- which was marked on Saturday.
According to the RCSC, the event was aimed at raising
awareness of AIDS issues in China, mobilizing leaders in various sectors and
generating funds to support the AIDS campaign via the China Red Cross Foundation
(CRCF).
Wang Rupeng, the CRCF secretary-general, said a total
of 150,000 yuan (19,700 U.S. dollars) had been raised through the event as each
participant had donated at least 100 yuan (13.16 U.S. dollars).
"All donations for this event will be used to build a
'Sunlight Garden' to conduct peer education and training related to AIDS
treatment and care," said Wang.
The campaign received sponsorship worth more than
600,000 yuan(79,000 U.S. dollars), including 50,000 U.S. dollars from the UNAIDS
and more than 400,000 yuan (52.6 U.S. dollars) from the country's private
sectors.
Red ribbon flies across China on World
AIDS Day
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Chinese college students display a kite
carrying a red ribbon during an activity to commemorate the World AIDS Day
in Zhengzhou, capital of central China's Henan Province, Dec. 1, 2007.
(Xinhua Photo)
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BEIJING, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) -- On the 20th World AIDS Day,
the campaign to prevent HIV/AIDS and combat discrimination is being publicized
across China with the aim of raising public awareness about the virus, which was
previously linked to "immoral conduct" in the country. Full story
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