Meeting at UN, media executives launch global AIDS awareness campaign
![Dr. Peter Piot Dr. Peter Piot](https://global.unitednations.entermediadb.net/assets/mediadb/services/module/asset/downloads/preset/assets/2004/01/01743/image100x100cropped.jpg)
The Global Media AIDS Initiative, arising from a partnership between the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and the Kaiser Family Foundation, brought together the Presidents, Chief Executive Officers and senior executives of more than 20 companies from around the world for a discussion on how media can use their resources to raise awareness about and gain broader support for the fight against the disease.
According to UNAIDS, a large percentage of people in some of the worst affected regions have never heard of the disease. Recent studies have shown that in 21 African countries more than 60 per cent of girls were found to have at least one major misconception about the virus or were unaware of its existence. In addition, stigmatization and discrimination against people living with HIV continue to be among the greatest barriers to preventing the spread of new infections and to providing adequate care and support.
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Kofi Annan |
UNAIDS Executive Director Dr. Peter Piot said that AIDS was an epidemic of the information age. Yet, it was precisely the tools of the information age that were the strongest weapons in the fight against the epidemic, as denial, inaction, ignorance, stigma and discrimination were the key forces that allowed to spread.
"Perhaps most alarmingly, despite knowing what works, we are not yet reversing its spread," he said, pointing out that more people had been infected with HIV and more people had died of AIDS last year than in any previous year.
"What makes today's meeting historic is your commitment and action to harness the enormous power of your companies in making AIDS part of your core business," Dr. Piot said, and that would have a tremendous impact on the world's response to the epidemic.
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Bill Gates |
"I think the challenge for all of you is to think about how to raise visibility. The AIDS story is not just a bad news story; it's a story about incredible people doing this scientific discovery…It's a story of volunteers, it's a story of people persevering, it's a story of families coming together. There's so much that's positive about this that it doesn't just have to be viewed as something that is incredibly negative," he stressed.
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Shashi Tharoor |
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Drew Altman |
Listen to UN Radio report