On World AIDS Day, UN Women Calls for Fast-Tracking Gender Equality to Stem Epidemic
On World AIDS Day, UN Women Calls for Fast-Tracking Gender Equality to Stem Epidemic
As the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) released its new report for World AIDS Day calling on the world to take a fast-track approach over the next five years to end the world AIDS epidemic by 2030, UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka reminded the international community that to end AIDS, we must first work to eradicate gender inequality.
There is no doubt that the international community has made substantial progress on stemming the AIDS epidemic. Since 2001, new HIV infections have fallen by 38 percent worldwide. But that number alone does not tell the full story.
*******In 2013, almost 60 percent of all new HIV infections among young persons occurred among adolescent girls and young women. Thats almost 1,000 young women newly infected with HIV every day, and according to UN Women, AIDS is the leading cause of death among women of reproductive age (ages 15-49) worldwide. Violence against women, discrimination, lack of education, and poverty make women particularly vulnerable to HIV and create barriers to accessing treatment and care.********
To fast track the end of the AIDS epidemic we must fast track gender equality, asserted Mlambo-Ngcuka. We know the critical steps that must be taken on the path to gender equality, and we must scale up and invest in what works for women and girls in the context of HIV and AIDS. This includes empowering women and girls, particularly those living with HIV, and advancing their leadership; eliminating barriers and constraints to womens access to prevention, treatment and care services; eradicating gender-based violence; and ensuring adequate financing for womens needs and priorities in the AIDS response.
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http://feminist.org/blog/index.php/2014/12/01/on-world-aids-day-un-women-calls-for-fast-tracking-gender-equality/