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AIDS Accountability International scorecard rates country responses to pandemic

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HIV/AIDS Commitments to Women Often Unmet

AIDS Accountability International scorecard rates country responses to pandemic

Photo: AIDS Accountability International

Cover photo of AAI’s scorecard report 2009

HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death and disease for women of reproductive age, according to health officials.  A new report says much needs to be done to reverse that trend.

The report, from AIDS Accountability International, looks at how countries have responded to the needs of women regarding the pandemic by using a scorecard for each nation. 

   
Executive Director Rodrigo Garay says, “AAI’s scorecard represents the first and only independent comprehensive rate mechanism to hold governments and other leaders accountable for their progress in addressing HIV/AIDS.”

Following through on commitments   

“Through the Millennium Development Goals and the 2001 Declaration of commitment on HIV/AIDS, all United Nation member states have committed to a series of actions and concrete…targets to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS,” he says.
However, the scorecard shows there’s much to be done to fulfill those commitments.
“There is widespread lack of accountability and transparency in national AIDS responses, meaning we do not have the information that we should about human and financial resources are being utilized and how well countries are meeting their agreed targets for the well-being of women and girls,” he says.

Economic downturn having an effect
   
“The current global financial crisis is affecting the will and ability of donors to sustain the high levels of funding that are necessary for an effective global response to AIDS,” he says.
Garay says better monitoring and evaluation are needed to show whether funding is being well spent. 
“The main purpose of AIDS Accountability Scorecard on Women is to create transparency on governments’ performance in relation to these commitments to women,” says Per Strand of the University of Cape Town and AAI’s scientific director.

AIDS Accountability International

AAI’s sample scorecard of a country’s AIDS response to women and girls

He says the scorecard will encourage “constructive dialogue between key stakeholders in government, civil society and among global agencies on how country responses can become more effective and how progress should be best monitored.”
   
More awareness needed
   
U.N. Special Envoy on AIDS in Africa Elizabeth Mataka supports the findings.  She says, “Very limited progress has been made towards the achievement of the targets.  Certainly, we are faced with a situation where much, much more needs to be done.”

Mataka says there’s a lack of awareness about the disease and how to prevent it.

Globally, only 38 percent of females can demonstrate accurate and sufficient knowledge about ways to protect themselves from acquiring HIV,” she says.  The U.N. target was 95 percent awareness by 2010.

“In saying this, I also acknowledge that different countries are at different levels.  For example, in 2007, Eritrea had reached 79 percent, Rwanda 57 percent and Angola 23 percent,” she says.

The complete AAI scorecard can be found at www.aidsaccountability.org .
Mataka adds, “We need to understand specifically what it is in real terms that actually renders women much more vulnerable to infection to HIV so as to develop…informed programs that specifically address those needs.”

Also on hand for the report’s release was Sigrun Mogedal, Norwegian HIV/AIDS ambassador.

“I believe this report puts it all into reality and out of the illusion that we’ve come a long way to be response to the rights and needs of women.  If any response should be gender sensitive, it is the HIV and AIDS response.  And we’ve known that,’ she says. 

AIDS Accountability International is a non-profit organization is based in South Africa and Sweden.

 



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State of Eritrea ሃገረ ኤርትራ Hagere Ertra دولة إرتريا Dawlat Iritrīya

Anthem: Ertra, Ertra, Ertra Eritrea, Eritrea, Eritrea

Capital (and largest city) Asmara 15°20′N 38°55′E / 15.333°N 38.917°E / 15.333; 38.917

Official language(s) Tigrinya, Arabic, English Other languages Tigre, Saho, Bilen, Afar, Kunama, Nara, Hedareb,.

Ethnic groups 60% Tigrinya, 30% Tigre, 4% Afar, 3% Saho, 3% Kunama

Demonym Eritrean Government Provisional government - President Isaias Afewerki

Independence - From Italy November 1941 - From United Kingdom under UN Mandate 1951 - from Ethiopia de facto 24 May 1991 - From Ethiopia de jure 24 May 1993

Area - Total 117,600 km2 (100th) 45,405 sq mi - Water (%) 0.14%

Population - 2009 estimate 5,224,000[4] (109th) - 2008 census 5,291,370 - Density 43.1/km2 (165th) 111.7/sq mi

GDP (PPP) 2010 estimate - Total $3.625 billion[5] - Per capita $681[5] GDP (nominal) 2010 estimate - Total $2.117 billion[5] - Per capita $397[5] HDI (2007) steady 0.472 (low) (165th) Currency Nakfa (ERN)

Time zone EAT (UTC+3) - Summer (DST) not observed (UTC+3) Drives on the right ISO 3166 code ER Internet TLD .er Calling code 291 1 ,. National TV: Eritrea Television (ERI-TV)

Eritrea (play /ˌɛrɨˈtreɪ.ə/ or /ˌɛrɨˈtriːə/;[6] Ge'ez: ኤርትራ ʾErtrā, Arabic: إرتريا Iritrīyā), officially the State of Eritrea, is a country in the Horn of Africa. The capital is Asmara. It is bordered by Sudan in the west, Ethiopia in the south, and Djibouti in the southeast. The northeast and east of the country has an extensive coastline on the Red Sea, directly across from Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The Dahlak Archipelago and several of the Hanish Islands are part of Eritrea. Eritrea's size is approximately 117,600 km2 (45,406 sq mi) with an estimated population of 6 million...

Source: Wikipedia


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