UNDP en Ecuador
Secretary-General
Applauds Participants in AIDS memorial quilt march
07/02/2001
SECRETARY-GENERAL APPLAUDS
PARTICIPANTS IN AIDS MEMORIAL QUILT MARCH
Following is the message of Secretary-General Kofi Annan to the
AIDS Memorial Quilt March in Washington, D.C., 3 June:
This march is a fine example of the kind of response we need across
the world in facing up to HIV/AIDS. The pandemic is a catastrophe
of global proportions. More than thirty-six million people today
are living with the virus. The vast majority of them are in
sub-Saharan Africa, where the devastation is so acute that it has
become one of the main obstacles to development, further
impoverishing entire countries and limiting their capabilities to
recover. But parts of the Caribbean and Asia are not far behind,
and the pandemic is spreading at an alarming rate in eastern Europe,
too.
Last year alone, three million people worldwide died from the virus
-- the highest annual total of AIDS deaths so far. It is as though
the population of five cities the size of Washington, D.C, had been
wiped out in the space of a single year.
For the past two decades, global progress in facing up to the
pandemic has been painfully slow. But for much of the international
community, the magnitude of the crisis is finally beginning to sink
in. We must now build on this to galvanize global awareness. To
defeat this epidemic that haunts humanity, and to give hope to the
millions infected with the virus, we need a response that matches
the challenge. That is why I have issued a call to action to the
whole world, asking every sector of society to play its full part
in the fight against AIDS.
And that is why the commitment of all of you here today is so
important. Three weeks from now, delegates from governments all
over the world will gather at United Nations Headquarters for a
Special Session of the General Assembly on HIV/AIDS. It is
essential that they hear people speak up about the virus and demand
decisive action against it. And so, on behalf of the United Nations,
I thank you for taking part today. You have understood that AIDS is
our problem, and nothing less than a test of our common humanity. |