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Declaration
of Commitment on HIV/AIDS
"Global
Crisis — Global Action"
http://www.un.org/ga/aids/coverage/FinalDeclarationHIVAIDS.html
1.
We, Heads of State and Government and Representatives of
States and Governments, assembled at the United Nations, from
25 to 27 June 2001, for the twenty-sixth special session of
the General Assembly convened in accordance with resolution
55/13, as a matter of urgency, to review and address the
problem of HIV/AIDS in all its aspects as well as to secure a
global commitment to enhancing coordination and
intensification of national, regional and international
efforts to combat it in a comprehensive manner;
2.
Deeply concerned that the global HIV/AIDS epidemic, through
its devastating scale and impact, constitutes a global
emergency and one of the most formidable challenges to human
life and dignity, as well as to the effective enjoyment of
human rights, which undermines social and economic development
throughout the world and affects all levels of society —
national, community, family and individual;
3.
Noting with profound concern, that by the end of the year
2000, 36.1 million people worldwide were living with HIV/AIDS,
90 per cent in developing countries and 75 per cent in
sub-Saharan Africa;
4.
Noting with grave concern that all people, rich and poor,
without distinction of age, gender or race are affected by the
HIV/AIDS epidemic, further noting that people in developing
countries are the most affected and that women, young adults
and children, in particular girls, are the most vulnerable;
5.
Concerned also that the continuing spread of HIV/AIDS will
constitute a serious obstacle to the realization of the global
development goals we adopted at the Millennium Summit;
6.
Recalling and reaffirming our previous commitments on HIV/AIDS
made through:
•
The United Nations Millennium Declaration of 8 September 2000;
•
The Political Declaration and Further Actions and Initiatives
to Implement the Commitments made at the World Summit for
Social Development of 1 July 2000;
•
The Political Declaration and Further Action and Initiatives
to Implement the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action
of 10 June 2000;
•
Key Actions for the Further Implementation of the Programme of
Action of the International Conference on Population and
Development of 2 July 1999;
•
The regional call for action to fight HIV/AIDS in Asia and the
Pacific of 25 April 2001;
•
The Abuja Declaration and Framework for Action for the Fight
Against HIV/ AIDS, Tuberculosis and other Related Infectious
Diseases in Africa, 27 April 2001;
•
The Declaration of the Ibero-America Summit of Heads of State
of November 2000 in Panama;
•
The Caribbean Partnership Against HIV/AIDS, 14 February, 2001;
•
The European Union Programme for Action: Accelerated Action on
HIV/ AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis in the Context of Poverty
Reduction of 14 May 2001;
•
The Baltic Sea Declaration on HIV/AIDS Prevention of 4 May
2000;
•
The Central Asian Declaration on HIV/AIDS of 18 May 2001;
7.
Convinced of the need to have an urgent, coordinated and
sustained response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, which will build
on the experience and lessons learned over the past 20 years;
8.
Noting with grave concern that Africa, in particular
sub-Saharan Africa, is currently the worst affected region
where HIV/AIDS is considered as a state of emergency, which
threatens development, social cohesion, political stability,
food security and life expectancy and imposes a devastating
economic burden and that the dramatic situation on the
continent needs urgent and exceptional national, regional and
international action;
9.
Welcoming the commitments of African Heads of State or
Government, at the Abuja Special Summit in April 2001,
particularly their pledge to set a target of allocating at
least 15 per cent of their annual national budgets for the
improvement of the health sector to help address the HIV/AIDS
epidemic; and recognizing that action to reach this target, by
those countries whose resources are limited, will need to be
complemented by increased international assistance;
10.
Recognizing also that other regions are seriously affected and
confront similar threats, particularly the Caribbean region,
with the second highest rate of HIV infection after
sub-Saharan Africa, the Asia-Pacific region where 7.5 million
people are already living with HIV/AIDS, the Latin America
region with 1.5 million people living with HIV/AIDS, and the
Central and Eastern European region with very rapidly rising
infection rates; and that the potential exists for a rapid
escalation of the epidemic and its impact throughout the world
if no specific measures are taken;
11.
Recognizing that poverty, underdevelopment and illiteracy are
among the principal contributing factors to the spread of
HIV/AIDS and noting with grave concern that HIV/AIDS is
compounding poverty and is now reversing or impeding
development in many countries and should therefore be
addressed in an integrated manner;
12.
Noting that armed conflicts and natural disasters also
exacerbate the spread of the epidemic;
13.
Noting further that stigma, silence, discrimination, and
denial, as well as lack of confidentiality, undermine
prevention, care and treatment efforts and increase the impact
of the epidemic on individuals, families, communities and
nations and must also be addressed;
14.
Stressing that gender equality and the empowerment of women
are fundamental elements in the reduction of the vulnerability
of women and girls to HIV/AIDS;
15.
Recognizing that access to medication in the context of
pandemics such as HIV/AIDS is one of the fundamental elements
to achieve progressively the full realization of the right of
everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard
of physical and mental health;
16.
Recognizing that the full realization of human rights and
fundamental freedoms for all is an essential element in a
global response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic, including in the
areas of prevention, care, support and treatment, and that it
reduces vulnerability to HIV/AIDS and prevents stigma and
related discrimination against people living with or at risk
of HIV/AIDS;
17.
Acknowledging that prevention of HIV infection must be the
mainstay of the national, regional and international response
to the epidemic; and that prevention, care, support and
treatment for those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS are
mutually reinforcing elements of an effective response and
must be integrated in a comprehensive approach to combat the
epidemic;
18.
Recognizing the need to achieve the prevention goals set out
in this Declaration in order to stop the spread of the
epidemic and acknowledging that all countries must continue to
emphasize widespread and effective prevention, including
awareness-raising campaigns through education, nutrition,
information and health-care services;
19.
Recognizing that care, support and treatment can contribute to
effective prevention through increased acceptance of voluntary
and confidential counselling and testing, and by keeping
people living with HIV/AIDS and vulnerable groups in close
contact with health-care systems and facilitating their access
to information, counselling and preventive supplies;
20.
Emphasizing the important role of cultural, family, ethical
and religious factors in the prevention of the epidemic, and
in treatment, care and support, taking into account the
particularities of each country as well as the importance of
respecting all human rights and fundamental freedoms;
21.
Noting with concern that some negative economic, social,
cultural, political, financial and legal factors are hampering
awareness, education, prevention, care, treatment and support
efforts;
22.
Noting the importance of establishing and strengthening human
resources and national health and social infrastructures as
imperatives for the effective delivery of prevention,
treatment, care and support services;
23.
Recognizing that effective prevention, care and treatment
strategies will require behavioural changes and increased
availability of and non-discriminatory access to, inter alia,
vaccines, condoms, microbicides, lubricants, sterile injecting
equipment, drugs including anti-retroviral therapy,
diagnostics and related technologies as well as increased
research and development;
24.
Recognizing also that the cost availability and affordability
of drugs and related technology are significant factors to be
reviewed and addressed in all aspects and that there is a need
to reduce the cost of these drugs and technologies in close
collaboration with the private sector and pharmaceutical
companies;
25.
Acknowledging that the lack of affordable pharmaceuticals and
of feasible supply structures and health systems continue to
hinder an effective response to HIV/AIDS in many countries,
especially for the poorest people and recalling efforts to
make drugs available at low prices for those in need;
26.
Welcoming the efforts of countries to promote innovation and
the development of domestic industries consistent with
international law in order to increase access to medicines to
protect the health of their populations; and noting that the
impact of international trade agreements on access to or local
manufacturing of, essential drugs and on the development of
new drugs needs to be further evaluated;
27.
Welcoming the progress made in some countries to contain the
epidemic, particularly through: strong political commitment
and leadership at the highest levels, including community
leadership; effective use of available resources and
traditional medicines; successful prevention, care, support
and treatment strategies; education and information
initiatives; working in partnership with communities, civil
society, people living with HIV/AIDS and vulnerable groups;
and the active promotion and protection of human rights; and
recognizing the importance of sharing and building on our
collective and diverse experiences, through regional and
international cooperation including North/South, South/South
cooperation and triangular cooperation;
28.
Acknowledging that resources devoted to combating the epidemic
both at the national and international levels are not
commensurate with the magnitude of the problem;
29.
Recognizing the fundamental importance of strengthening
national, regional and subregional capacities to address and
effectively combat HIV/AIDS and that this will require
increased and sustained human, financial and technical
resources through strengthened national action and cooperation
and increased regional, subregional and international
cooperation;
30.
Recognizing that external debt and debt-servicing problems
have substantially constrained the capacity of many developing
countries, as well as countries with economies in transition,
to finance the fight against HIV/AIDS;
31.
Affirming the key role played by the family in prevention,
care, support and treatment of persons affected and infected
by HIV/AIDS, bearing in mind that in different cultural,
social and political systems various forms of the family
exist;
32.
Affirming that beyond the key role played by communities,
strong partnerships among Governments, the United Nations
system, intergovernmental organizations, people living with
HIV/AIDS and vulnerable groups, medical, scientific and
educational institutions, non-governmental organizations, the
business sector including generic and research-based
pharmaceutical companies, trade unions, media,
parliamentarians, foundations, community organizations,
faith-based organizations and traditional leaders are
important;
33.
Acknowledging the particular role and significant contribution
of people living with HIV/AIDS, young people and civil society
actors in addressing the problem of HIV/AIDS in all its
aspects and recognizing that their full involvement and
participation in design, planning, implementation and
evaluation of programmes is crucial to the development of
effective responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic;
34.
Further acknowledging the efforts of international
humanitarian organizations combating the epidemic, including
among others the volunteers of the International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in the most affected
areas all over the world;
35.
Commending the leadership role on HIV/AIDS policy and
coordination in the United Nations system of the UNAIDS
Programme Coordinating Board; noting its endorsement in
December 2000 of the Global Strategy Framework for HIV/AIDS,
which could assist, as appropriate, Member States and relevant
civil society actors in the development of HIV/AIDS
strategies, taking into account the particular context of the
epidemic in different parts of the world;
36.
Solemnly declare our commitment to address the HIV/AIDS crisis
by taking action as follows, taking into account the diverse
situations and circumstances in different regions and
countries throughout the world;
Leadership
Strong leadership at all levels of society is essential for an effective
response to the epidemic
Leadership by Governments in combating HIV/AIDS is essential and their
efforts should be complemented by the full and active
participation of civil society, the business community and the
private sector
Leadership involves personal commitment and concrete actions
At
the national level
37.
By 2003, ensure the development and implementation of
multisectoral national strategies and financing plans for
combating HIV/AIDS that: address the epidemic in forthright
terms; confront stigma, silence and denial; address gender and
age-based dimensions of the epidemic; eliminate discrimination
and marginalization; involve partnerships with civil society
and the business sector and the full participation of people
living with HIV/AIDS, those in vulnerable groups and people
mostly at risk, particularly women and young people; are
resourced to the extent possible from national budgets without
excluding other sources, inter alia international cooperation;
fully promote and protect all human rights and fundamental
freedoms, including the right to the highest attainable
standard of physical and mental health; integrate a gender
perspective; and address risk, vulnerability, prevention,
care, treatment and support and reduction of the impact of the
epidemic; and strengthen health, education and legal system
capacity;
38.
By 2003, integrate HIV/AIDS prevention, care, treatment and
support and impact mitigation priorities into the mainstream
of development planning, including in poverty eradication
strategies, national budget allocations and sectoral
development plans;
At
the regional and subregional level
39.
Urge and support regional organizations and partners to: be
actively involved in addressing the crisis; intensify
regional, subregional and interregional cooperation and
coordination; and develop regional strategies and responses in
support of expanded country level efforts;
40.
Support all regional and subregional initiatives on HIV/AIDS
including: the International Partnership against AIDS in
Africa (IPAA) and the ECA-African Development Forum Consensus
and Plan of Action: Leadership to Overcome HIV/ AIDS; the
Abuja Declaration and Framework for Action for the Fight
Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Other Diseases; the CARICOM
Pan-Caribbean Partnership Against HIV/AIDS; the ESCAP Regional
Call for Action to Fight HIV/ AIDS in Asia and the Pacific;
the Baltic Sea Initiative and Action Plan; the Horizontal
Technical Cooperation Group on HIV/AIDS in Latin America and
the Caribbean; the European Union Programme for Action:
Accelerated Action on HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis in
the context of poverty reduction;
41.
Encourage the development of regional approaches and plans to
address HIV/AIDS;
42.
Encourage and support local and national organizations to
expand and strengthen regional partnerships, coalitions and
networks;
43.
Encourage the United Nations Economic and Social Council to
request the regional commissions within their respective
mandates and resources to support national efforts in their
respective regions in combating HIV/AIDS;
At
the global level
44.
Support greater action and coordination by all relevant United
Nations system organizations, including their full
participation in the development and implementation of a
regularly updated United Nations strategic plan for HIV/AIDS,
guided by the principles contained in this Declaration;
45.
Support greater cooperation between relevant United Nations
system organizations and international organizations combating
HIV/AIDS;
46.
Foster stronger collaboration and the development of
innovative partnerships between the public and private sectors
and by 2003, establish and strengthen mechanisms that involve
the private sector and civil society partners and people
living with HIV/AIDS and vulnerable groups in the fight
against HIV/AIDS;
Prevention
Prevention must be the mainstay of our response
47.
By 2003, establish time-bound national targets to achieve the
internationally agreed global prevention goal to reduce by
2005 HIV prevalence among young men and women aged 15 to 24 in
the most affected countries by 25 per cent and by 25 per cent
globally by 2010, and to intensify efforts to achieve these
targets as well as to challenge gender stereotypes and
attitudes, and gender inequalities in relation to HIV/AIDS,
encouraging the active involvement of men and boys;
48.
By 2003, establish national prevention targets, recognizing
and addressing factors leading to the spread of the epidemic
and increasing people’s vulnerability, to reduce HIV
incidence for those identifiable groups, within particular
local contexts, which currently have high or increasing rates
of HIV infection, or which available public health information
indicates are at the highest risk for new infection;
49.
By 2005, strengthen the response to HIV/AIDS in the world of
work by establishing and implementing prevention and care
programmes in public, private and informal work sectors and
take measures to provide a supportive workplace environment
for people living with HIV/AIDS;
50.
By 2005, develop and begin to implement national, regional and
international strategies that facilitate access to HIV/AIDS
prevention programmes for migrants and mobile workers,
including the provision of information on health and social
services;
51.
By 2003, implement universal precautions in health-care
settings to prevent transmission of HIV infection;
52.
By 2005, ensure: that a wide range of prevention programmes
which take account of local circumstances, ethics and cultural
values, is available in all countries, particularly the most
affected countries, including information, education and
communication, in languages most understood by communities and
respectful of cultures, aimed at reducing risk-taking
behaviour and encouraging responsible sexual behaviour,
including abstinence and fidelity; expanded access to
essential commodities, including male and female condoms and
sterile injecting equipment; harm reduction efforts related to
drug use; expanded access to voluntary and confidential
counselling and testing; safe blood supplies; and early and
effective treatment of sexually transmittable infections;
53.
By 2005, ensure that at least 90 per cent, and by 2010 at
least 95 per cent of young men and women aged 15 to 24 have
access to the information, education, including peer education
and youth-specific HIV education, and services necessary to
develop the life skills required to reduce their vulnerability
to HIV infection; in full partnership with youth, parents,
families, educators and health-care providers;
54.
By 2005, reduce the proportion of infants infected with HIV by
20 per cent, and by 50 per cent by 2010, by: ensuring that 80
per cent of pregnant women accessing antenatal care have
information, counselling and other HIV prevention services
available to them, increasing the availability of and by
providing access for HIV-infected women and babies to
effective treatment to reduce mother-to-child transmission of
HIV, as well as through effective interventions for
HIV-infected women, including voluntary and confidential
counselling and testing, access to treatment, especially
anti-retroviral therapy and, where appropriate, breast milk
substitutes and the provision of a continuum of care;
Care, support
and treatment
Care, support and treatment are fundamental elements of an effective
response
55.
By 2003, ensure that national strategies, supported by
regional and international strategies, are developed in close
collaboration with the international community, including
Governments and relevant intergovernmental organizations as
well as with civil society and the business sector, to
strengthen health care systems and address factors affecting
the provision of HIV-related drugs, including anti-retroviral
drugs, inter alia affordability and pricing, including
differential pricing, and technical and health care systems
capacity. Also, in an urgent manner make every effort to:
provide progressively and in a sustainable manner, the highest
attainable standard of treatment for HIV/AIDS, including the
prevention and treatment of opportunistic infections, and
effective use of quality-controlled anti-retroviral therapy in
a careful and monitored manner to improve adherence and
effectiveness and reduce the risk of developing resistance; to
cooperate constructively in strengthening pharmaceutical
policies and practices, including those applicable to generic
drugs and intellectual property regimes, in order further to
promote innovation and the development of domestic industries
consistent with international law;
56.
By 2005, develop and make significant progress in implementing
comprehensive care strategies to: strengthen family and
community-based care including that provided by the informal
sector, and health care systems to provide and monitor
treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS, including infected
children, and to support individuals, households, families and
communities affected by HIV/ AIDS; improve the capacity and
working conditions of health care personnel, and the
effectiveness of supply systems, financing plans and referral
mechanisms required to provide access to affordable medicines,
including anti-retroviral drugs, diagnostics and related
technologies, as well as quality medical, palliative and
psycho-social care;
57.
By 2003, ensure that national strategies are developed in
order to provide psycho-social care for individuals, families,
and communities affected by HIV/AIDS;
HIV/AIDS and
human rights
Realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all is
essential to reduce vulnerability to HIV/AIDS
Respect for the rights of people living with HIV/AIDS drives an
effective response
58.
By 2003, enact, strengthen or enforce as appropriate
legislation, regulations and other measures to eliminate all
forms of discrimination against, and to ensure the full
enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by
people living with HIV/AIDS and members of vulnerable groups;
in particular to ensure their access to, inter alia education,
inheritance, employment, health care, social and health
services, prevention, support, treatment, information and
legal protection, while respecting their privacy and
confidentiality; and develop strategies to combat stigma and
social exclusion connected with the epidemic;
59.
By 2005, bearing in mind the context and character of the
epidemic and that globally women and girls are
disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS, develop and
accelerate the implementation of national strategies that:
promote the advancement of women and women’s full enjoyment
of all human rights; promote shared responsibility of men and
women to ensure safe sex; empower women to have control over
and decide freely and responsibly on matters related to their
sexuality to increase their ability to protect themselves from
HIV infection;
60.
By 2005, implement measures to increase capacities of women
and adolescent girls to protect themselves from the risk of
HIV infection, principally through the provision of health
care and health services, including sexual and reproductive
health, and through prevention education that promotes gender
equality within a culturally and gender sensitive framework;
61.
By 2005, ensure development and accelerated implementation of
national strategies for women’s empowerment, promotion and
protection of women’s full enjoyment of all human rights and
reduction of their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS through the
elimination of all forms of discrimination, as well as all
forms of violence against women and girls, including harmful
traditional and customary practices, abuse, rape and other
forms of sexual violence, battering and trafficking in women
and girls;
Reducing
vulnerability
The vulnerable must be given priority in the response
Empowering women is essential for reducing vulnerability
62.
By 2003, in order to complement prevention programmes that
address activities which place individuals at risk of HIV
infection, such as risky and unsafe sexual behaviour and
injecting drug use, have in place in all countries strategies,
policies and programmes that identify and begin to address
those factors that make individuals particularly vulnerable to
HIV infection, including underdevelopment, economic
insecurity, poverty, lack of empowerment of women, lack of
education, social exclusion, illiteracy, discrimination, lack
of information and/or commodities for self-protection, all
types of sexual exploitation of women, girls and boys,
including for commercial reasons; such strategies, policies
and programmes should address the gender dimension of the
epidemic, specify the action that will be taken to address
vulnerability and set targets for achievement;
63.
By 2003, develop and/or strengthen strategies, policies and
programmes, which recognize the importance of the family in
reducing vulnerability, inter alia, in educating and guiding
children and take account of cultural, religious and ethical
factors, to reduce the vulnerability of children and young
people by: ensuring access of both girls and boys to primary
and secondary education, including on HIV/AIDS in curricula
for adolescents; ensuring safe and secure environments,
especially for young girls; expanding good quality
youth-friendly information and sexual health education and
counselling service; strengthening reproductive and sexual
health programmes; and involving families and young people in
planning, implementing and evaluating HIV/AIDS prevention and
care programmes, to the extent possible;
64.
By 2003, develop and/or strengthen national strategies,
policies and programmes, supported by regional and
international initiatives, as appropriate, through a
participatory approach, to promote and protect the health of
those identifiable groups which currently have high or
increasing rates of HIV infection or which public health
information indicates are at greatest risk of and most
vulnerable to new infection as indicated by such factors as
the local history of the epidemic, poverty, sexual practices,
drug using behaviour, livelihood, institutional location,
disrupted social structures and population movements forced or
otherwise;
Children
orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS
Children orphaned and affected by HIV/AIDS need special assistance
65.
By 2003, develop and by 2005 implement national policies and
strategies to: build and strengthen governmental, family and
community capacities to provide a supportive environment for
orphans and girls and boys infected and affected by HIV/AIDS
including by providing appropriate counselling and
psycho-social support; ensuring their enrolment in school and
access to shelter, good nutrition, health and social services
on an equal basis with other children; to protect orphans and
vulnerable children from all forms of abuse, violence,
exploitation, discrimination, trafficking and loss of
inheritance;
66.
Ensure non-discrimination and full and equal enjoyment of all
human rights through the promotion of an active and visible
policy of de-stigmatization of children orphaned and made
vulnerable by HIV/AIDS;
67.
Urge the international community, particularly donor
countries, civil society, as well as the private sector to
complement effectively national programmes to support
programmes for children orphaned or made vulnerable by
HIV/AIDS in affected regions, in countries at high risk and to
direct special assistance to sub-Saharan Africa;
Alleviating
social and economic impact
To address HIV/AIDS is to invest in sustainable development
68.
By 2003, evaluate the economic and social impact of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic and develop multisectoral strategies to:
address the impact at the individual, family, community and
national levels; develop and accelerate the implementation of
national poverty eradication strategies to address the impact
of HIV/AIDS on household income, livelihoods, and access to
basic social services, with special focus on individuals,
families and communities severely affected by the epidemic;
review the social and economic impact of HIV/AIDS at all
levels of society especially on women and the elderly,
particularly in their role as caregivers and in families
affected by HIV/AIDS and address their special needs; adjust
and adapt economic and social development policies, including
social protection policies, to address the impact of HIV/AIDS
on economic growth, provision of essential economic services,
labour productivity, government revenues, and deficit-creating
pressures on public resources;
69.
By 2003, develop a national legal and policy framework that
protects in the workplace the rights and dignity of persons
living with and affected by HIV/AIDS and those at the greatest
risk of HIV/AIDS in consultation with representatives of
employers and workers, taking account of established
international guidelines on HIV/AIDS in the workplace;
Research and
development
With no cure for HIV/AIDS yet found, further research and development is
crucial
70.
Increase investment and accelerate research on the development
of HIV vaccines, while building national research capacity
especially in developing countries, and especially for viral
strains prevalent in highly affected regions; in addition,
support and encourage increased national and international
investment in HIV/AIDS-related research and development
including biomedical, operations, social, cultural and
behavioural research and in traditional medicine to: improve
prevention and therapeutic approaches; accelerate access to
prevention, care and treatment and care technologies for
HIV/AIDS (and its associated opportunistic infections and
malignancies and sexually transmitted diseases), including
female controlled methods and microbicides, and in particular,
appropriate, safe and affordable HIV vaccines and their
delivery, and to diagnostics, tests, methods to prevent
mother-to-child transmission; and improve our understanding of
factors which influence the epidemic and actions which address
it, inter alia, through increased funding and public/private
partnerships; create a conducive environment for research and
ensure that it is based on highest ethical standards;
71.
Support and encourage the development of national and
international research infrastructure, laboratory capacity,
improved surveillance systems, data collection, processing and
dissemination, and training of basic and clinical researchers,
social scientists, health-care providers and technicians, with
a focus on the countries most affected by HIV/AIDS,
particularly developing countries and those countries
experiencing or at risk of rapid expansion of the epidemic;
72.
Develop and evaluate suitable approaches for monitoring
treatment efficacy, toxicity, side effects, drug interactions,
and drug resistance, develop methodologies to monitor the
impact of treatment on HIV transmission and risk behaviours;
73.
Strengthen international and regional cooperation in
particular North/South, South/South and triangular
cooperation, related to transfer of relevant technologies,
suitable to the environment in prevention and care of
HIV/AIDS, the exchange of experiences and best practices,
researchers and research findings and strengthen the role of
UNAIDS in this process. In this context, encourage that the
end results of these cooperative research findings and
technologies be owned by all parties to the research,
reflecting their relevant contribution and dependent upon
their providing legal protection to such findings; and affirm
that all such research should be free from bias;
74.
By 2003, ensure that all research protocols for the
investigation of HIV-related treatment including
anti-retroviral therapies and vaccines based on international
guidelines and best practices are evaluated by independent
committees of ethics, in which persons living with HIV/AIDS
and caregivers for anti-retroviral therapy participate;
HIV/AIDS in
conflict and disaster affected regions
Conflicts and disasters contribute to the spread of HIV/AIDS
75.
By 2003, develop and begin to implement national strategies
that incorporate HIV/AIDS awareness, prevention, care and
treatment elements into programmes or actions that respond to
emergency situations, recognizing that populations
destabilized by armed conflict, humanitarian emergencies and
natural disasters, including refugees, internally displaced
persons and in particular, women and children, are at
increased risk of exposure to HIV infection; and, where
appropriate, factor HIV/AIDS components into international
assistance programmes;
76.
Call on all United Nations agencies, regional and
international organizations, as well as non-governmental
organizations involved with the provision and delivery of
international assistance to countries and regions affected by
conflicts, humanitarian crises or natural disasters, to
incorporate as a matter of urgency HIV/AIDS prevention, care
and awareness elements into their plans and programmes and
provide HIV/AIDS awareness and training to their personnel;
77.
By 2003, have in place national strategies to address the
spread of HIV among national uniformed services, where this is
required, including armed forces and civil defence force and
consider ways of using personnel from these services who are
educated and trained in HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention to
assist with HIV/ AIDS awareness and prevention activities
including participation in emergency, humanitarian, disaster
relief and rehabilitation assistance;
78.
By 2003, ensure the inclusion of HIV/AIDS awareness and
training, including a gender component, into guidelines
designed for use by defence personnel and other personnel
involved in international peacekeeping operations while also
continuing with ongoing education and prevention efforts,
including pre-deployment orientation, for these personnel;
Resources
The HIV/AIDS challenge cannot be met without new, additional and
sustained resources
79.
Ensure that the resources provided for the global response to
address HIV/AIDS are substantial, sustained and geared towards
achieving results;
80.
By 2005, through a series of incremental steps, reach an
overall target of annual expenditure on the epidemic of
between US$ 7 billion and US$ 10 billion in low and
middle-income countries and those countries experiencing or at
risk of experiencing rapid expansion for prevention, care,
treatment, support and mitigation of the impact of HIV/AIDS,
and take measures to ensure that needed resources are made
available, particularly from donor countries and also from
national budgets, bearing in mind that resources of the most
affected countries are seriously limited;
81.
Call on the international community, where possible, to
provide assistance for HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment
in developing countries on a grant basis;
82.
Increase and prioritize national budgetary allocations for
HIV/AIDS programmes as required and ensure that adequate
allocations are made by all ministries and other relevant
stakeholders;
83.
Urge the developed countries that have not done so to strive
to meet the targets of 0.7 per cent of their gross national
product for overall official development assistance and the
targets of earmarking of 0.15 per cent to 0.20 per cent of
gross national product as official development assistance for
least developed countries as agreed, as soon as possible,
taking into account the urgency and gravity of the HIV/ AIDS
epidemic;
84.
Urge the international community to complement and supplement
efforts of developing countries that commit increased national
funds to fight the HIV/AIDS epidemic through increased
international development assistance, particularly those
countries most affected by HIV/AIDS, particularly in Africa,
especially in sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean, countries at
high risk of expansion of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and other
affected regions whose resources to deal with the epidemic are
seriously limited;
85.
Integrate HIV/AIDS actions in development assistance
programmes and poverty eradication strategies as appropriate
and encourage the most effective and transparent use of all
resources allocated;
86.
Call on the international community and invite civil society
and the private sector to take appropriate measures to help
alleviate the social and economic impact of HIV/AIDS in the
most affected developing countries;
87.
Without further delay implement the enhanced Heavily Indebted
Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative and agree to cancel all
bilateral official debts of HIPC countries as soon as
possible, especially those most affected by HIV/AIDS, in
return for their making demonstrable commitments to poverty
eradication and urge the use of debt service savings to
finance poverty eradication programmes, particularly for
HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, care and support and other
infections;
88.
Call for speedy and concerted action to address effectively
the debt problems of least developed countries, low-income
developing countries, and middle-income developing countries,
particularly those affected by HIV/AIDS, in a comprehensive,
equitable, development-oriented and durable way through
various national and international measures designed to make
their debt sustainable in the long term and thereby to improve
their capacity to deal with the HIV/AIDS epidemic, including,
as appropriate, existing orderly mechanisms for debt
reduction, such as debt swaps for projects aimed at the
prevention, care and treatment of HIV/AIDS;
89.
Encourage increased investment in HIV/AIDS-related research,
nationally, regionally and internationally, in particular for
the development of sustainable and affordable prevention
technologies, such as vaccines and microbicides, and encourage
the proactive preparation of financial and logistic plans to
facilitate rapid access to vaccines when they become
available;
90.
Support the establishment, on an urgent basis, of a global
HIV/AIDS and health fund to finance an urgent and expanded
response to the epidemic based on an integrated approach to
prevention, care, support and treatment and to assist
Governments inter alia in their efforts to combat HIV/AIDS
with due priority to the most affected countries, notably in
sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean and to those countries at
high risk, mobilize contributions to the fund from public and
private sources with a special appeal to donor countries,
foundations, the business community including pharmaceutical
companies, the private sector, philanthropists and wealthy
individuals;
91.
By 2002, launch a worldwide fund-raising campaign aimed at the
general public as well as the private sector, conducted by
UNAIDS with the support and collaboration of interested
partners at all levels, to contribute to the global HIV/ AIDS
and health fund;
92.
Direct increased funding to national, regional and subregional
commissions and organizations to enable them to assist
Governments at the national, subregional and regional level in
their efforts to respond to the crisis;
93.
Provide the UNAIDS co-sponsoring agencies and the UNAIDS
secretariat with the resources needed to work with countries
in support of the goals of this Declaration;
Follow-up
Maintaining the momentum and monitoring progress are essential
At
the national level
94.
Conduct national periodic reviews involving the participation
of civil society, particularly people living with HIV/AIDS,
vulnerable groups and caregivers, of progress achieved in
realizing these commitments and identify problems and
obstacles to achieving progress and ensure wide dissemination
of the results of these reviews;
95.
Develop appropriate monitoring and evaluation mechanisms to
assist with follow-up in measuring and assessing progress,
develop appropriate monitoring and evaluation instruments,
with adequate epidemiological data;
96.
By 2003, establish or strengthen effective monitoring systems,
where appropriate, for the promotion and protection of human
rights of people living with HIV/AIDS;
At
the regional level
97.
Include HIV/AIDS and related public health concerns as
appropriate on the agenda of regional meetings at the
ministerial and Head of State and Government level;
98.
Support data collection and processing to facilitate periodic
reviews by regional commissions and/or regional organizations
of progress in implementing regional strategies and addressing
regional priorities and ensure wide dissemination of the
results of these reviews;
99.
Encourage the exchange between countries of information and
experiences in implementing the measures and commitments
contained in this Declaration, and in particular facilitate
intensified South-South and triangular cooperation;
At
the global level
100.
Devote sufficient time and at least one full day of the annual
General Assembly session to review and debate a report of the
Secretary-General on progress achieved in realizing the
commitments set out in this Declaration, with a view to
identifying problems and constraints and making
recommendations on action needed to make further progress;
101.
Ensure that HIV/AIDS issues are included on the agenda of all
appropriate United Nations conferences and meetings;
102.
Support initiatives to convene conferences, seminars,
workshops, training programmes and courses to follow up issues
raised in this Declaration and in this regard encourage
participation in and wide dissemination of the outcomes of:
the forthcoming Dakar Conference on Access to Care for HIV
Infection; the Sixth International Congress on AIDS in Asia
and the Pacific; the XII International Conference on AIDS and
Sexually Transmitted Infections in Africa; the XIV
International Conference on AIDS, Barcelona; the Xth
International Conference on People Living with HIV/AIDS, Port
of Spain; the II Forum and III Conference of the Latin
American and the Caribbean Horizontal Technical Cooperation on
HIV/AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections, La Habana; the
Vth International Conference on Home and Community Care for
Persons Living with HIV/AIDS, Changmai, Thailand;
103.
Explore, with a view to improving equity in access to
essential drugs, the feasibility of developing and
implementing, in collaboration with non-governmental
organizations and other concerned partners, systems for
voluntary monitoring and reporting of global drug prices;
We recognize and express our appreciation to those who have led the
effort to raise awareness of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and to deal
with its complex challenges;
We look forward to strong leadership by Governments, and concerted
efforts with full and active participation of the United
Nations, the entire multilateral system, civil society, the
business community and private sector;
And finally, we call on all countries to take the necessary steps to
implement this Declaration, in strengthened partnership and
cooperation with other multilateral and bilateral partners and
with civil society.
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