Guest guest Posted November 14, 2001 Report Share Posted November 14, 2001 WTC AND AIDS: MAKING THE CONNECTION " Ashok K. Rau September 11, 2001 - the terror attacks in New York and Washington. More than 300 confirmed deaths and over 5000 people missing, presumably dead. In some way or another, the entire international community was shaken by these events. The result: " A human tragedy of Global impact and concern, " an immediate International response to ensure the safety of people affected and, action on an International scale to address the sources responsible for the loss of human lives. It is precisely from this response, we can learn and understand what we are all doing wrong in our global and national responses to the HIV/AIDS crisis, in which millions of people have lost their lives, that too in miserable conditions. It also brings into perspective what we should be doing differently. I have been listening for a while, the rhetorical resolve of many great world leaders. But I often wonder if they have been matched with sustained, dedicated and committed action. Here again, let's look at the response of the leadership of the United States of America to the September 11 incidents. It has been all-encompassing, bipartisan, immediate and with a renewed sense of purpose and dedication. Billions of dollars have been made available from the national budgets, apart from billions from other sources. The UN has called for global action prompting world communities and countries to act swiftly in solidarity. (I was witness to almost every American, as I was in the US for a couple of weeks after the terrorist attacks, wondering what she or he should or could do to make a difference.) While the war against terrorism and the war against HIV/AIDS have fundamental differences, it's the similarities that are striking. Both are unconventional in nature and will require perseverance, tenacity and commitment from all spheres, both bring into perspective issues that are controversial and challenging. What is it then that is responsible for the largely sluggish and delayed response from leaders of countries at the forefront of the terror that is AIDS? As I write this piece, I am going back to more than 10 years ago when I sat on the steps of the ruins of a small chicken coup wondering what am I going to do about the threat of HIV/AIDS in India. More than ten years have gone by and the ruins of the chicken coup have grown up to an organisation called Freedom Foundation. I still sit in one corner of the chicken coup, though I must admit it does not look like a ruined chicken coup anymore. I have been witness to untold human suffering as thousands of people, who have been infected and affected, walking through the doors of the Foundation and its various units and hundreds of people losing their lives. Many who have lived long enough indeed touched our lives. Today I see around me young children infected and many who have been orphaned. Many have passed away, yet I do not see any urgency on the part of our society to respond. In fact we are still trying to figure out if we really do have an issue that needs a National response. The last time I was attending a consultative meeting, people were talking about a few states that " might " have to implement programmes on HIV/AIDS. We are still looking at implementing pilot studies instead of learning from the experience of others and up-scaling accordingly. It is heartening to know that there are a few committed people at the top but their numbers are far too few. The burden of addressing the epidemic rests in the hands of a few people in the Government and a handful of dedicated NGOs and CBOs. We must accept that we have an epidemic on our hands and that we are witnessing more and more people, right from housewives to corporate employees to young college students, getting infected, not to mention the dramatic increase in the number of children testing positive. We cannot afford to pretend that the problem lies only with a few marginalized communities and " target " them (the unintended prize we pay is more denial, stigma and fear) Maybe, in all fairness we need to question societies' response. How can any Government respond if its peoples are not equally responsible and create the necessary pressure of accountability? Can we attribute this to a couple of celebrities talking about HIV/AIDS? The need of the hour is a collective response, since the issue affects every section of society. One must acknowledge that international HIV/AIDS resources have increased over the past few years, so too has the depth and magnitude of the epidemic and its complex manifestations. Increasingly, the seeming inability to address the complexity of HIV/AIDS care needs in countries dwarfed by this epidemic has implications for the existing stereotyped prevention, care-and-support and reduction of stigma initiatives, which are mostly top-to- bottom strategies. For all too often, international resources are intimately linked to the agendas of the specific donors rather than addressing the actual needs of the concerned communities. Yet, on a more positive note on the battlefields of the HIV/AIDS warfront, be it in India, Uganda, Thailand, Mexico or Botswana, to name a few, heroes are being born and cultivated, but the Global and National trumpets need to be sounded with greater passion and purpose, for this again brings into perspective the question: are the lives of people in less developed countries, societies, and communities of less value since they are born into these communities or countries? Can any war be more significant than the human devastation called HIV/AIDS; can any war match the untold havoc to economies and hard- earned development? Yet the idea of a global or even a national response on a war footing exists only in the neatly carved words of politically correct expressions and statements. I see the epidemic and its devastation in some of the hard-hit African countries as the harbinger of a grim future for India in terms of the impact of the epidemic. I hope and pray that I will be proved wrong, for it is too frightening a thought. ________________ Ashok K. Rau Ashok. K. Rau, one of the most visible and compassionate faces of India's 's campaign against HIV/AIDS, is a co-founder of Freedom Foundation, the Banagalore based NGO working in the field of substance abuse and HIV/AIDS. A highly resourceful professional of regional and international repute, Mr. Rau is a special guest of YouandAIDS this month in view of Freedom Foundation winning the prestigious Commonwealth Award for Action on HIV/AIDS. An experienced psychotherapist, Mr. Rau established the Freedom Foundation in 1992 in Bangalore along with friend and colleague, Mr. Karl Sequiera to address the needs of people suffering from alcohlolism and substance abuse. Three years later, recognising the link between subsatance abuse and HIV and the need for a meaningful response, a centre for HIV/AIDS was set up. The Foundation has since expanded to cover places like Bellary, Mangalore, Udipi and Hyderabad. Realising that addiction is a mind-altering disease, which can be treated, a unique bio-psycho-socio model, specific to the Indian context is employed at the deaddiction and rehabilitation centre. In 1996, when the Foundation opened its day care centre for HIV positive people in Hennur, it was hailed as the first of its kind in the country. In 1999, the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) recognised its contribution and identified it as a national model for low-cost care. Today Mr. Rau is a distinguished expert and an international consultant on care and support for PLWHAs (People Living With HIV/AIDS). He is a member of the National AIDS committee and the National Technical Resource Group on the Legal and Ethical issues of HIV/AIDS. He is also a member of the HIV/AIDS Task Force of the Karnataka State government and the Executive and the Technical committees and the Joint Appraisal Team of the Karnataka State AIDS Control Society. Through Freedom Foundation, Mr. Rau articulates the need for unhindered access to quality care for PLWHAs and recognising their rights. His approach to HIV/AIDS is marked by compassion for humanity and the recognition of the rights of deprived communities and individuals. He involves positive people in the planning and decision making process of Freedom Foundation and campaigns for protective and instrumental laws and change in government policies in favour of positive people. He contributes to the literature, research and discussion on HIV/AIDS and disseminates the lessons learnt at the Foundation. He is also involved in the training of caregivers, NGOs, CBOs and strives to build the capacity of other organisations. Mr. Rau's use of the network of community leaders at district and village panchayat levels, spiritual leaders and media personnel to spread messages for awareness-creation and destigmatisation of the disease is also widely appreciated. (Mr. Ashok K. Rau could be contacted at freedom@... or ashokrau@...) __________________________________ http://www.youandaids.org/GuestColumn/AshokRau/default.asp# ________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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