December the 1st is World AIDS Day and campaigners around the world came together
on Wednesday to mark this year's theme: "universal access and human rights." AIDS
has killed more than 25 million people since 1981 and over 33 million people worldwide
live with HIV, the virus that causes the disease. A report released last week by
the UN’s AIDS agency says the global AIDS epidemic has slowed with a 20 percent decrease
in new HIV infections over the past decade but it says there are still 7,000 new infections
each day.
Sub-Saharan Africa is described as the epicentre of the AIDS
epidemic and bears almost 70 percent of the global HIV burden. One small country
in Africa where HIV/AIDS is a critical public health issue is Namibia. The prevalence
of HIV there is among the highest in the world and has been the leading cause of death
since 1996.
Father Richard Bauer is the head of Catholic Aids Action in Namibia
and he fears that international solidarity with the plight of AIDS/HIV sufferers is
waning: "I think the world is getting tired of AIDS... sometimes I say that AIDS
is no longer a designer charity and it has sometimes gone off the radar, particularly
with the global economic crisis." .
As more and more poor people get access
to life-saving antiretroviral drugs, Father Bauer says "the diagnosis of AIDS is no
longer a death sentence but it is a sentence of life-long medication." He says his
message for World AIDS Day, is "it's not over and if we fail in our response, AIDS
is going to rise up and come back and get us, we just cannot let up on this." Listen
to this interview by Susy Hodges with Father Bauer: