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Malawi launches national HIV testing campaign

by Staff Writers
Lilongwe (AFP) Jul 17, 2006
Malawi on Monday launched a week-long HIV testing campaign amid fears the fight against AIDS is being hampered by people not knowing whether they have the virus.

Launching the campaign in the administrative capital Lilongwe, Health Minister Marjorie Ngaunje said HIV/AIDS prevention efforts could come to naught if people did not come forward for treatment because they did not know they carried the virus.

"This situation poses a great threat to prevention efforts, including missed opportunities by many eligible Malawians to access care and support services," said Ngaunje, who herself underwent an AIDS test at the launch.

"It is about staying negative if you are not infected or taking advantage of the treatment, care and support services available throughout the country if you are HIV positive," she said.

The campaign, which is expected to reach over 50,000 citizens in the poor southern African country, follows the revelation that only 15 percent of the countrys population of 12 million people have been tested for HIV/AIDS.

Malawis first case of HIV/AIDS was identified in 1985 and by 2005 the country had 930,000 people living with the virus, nine percent of whom were under 14.

Malawi has put about 47,000 infected people on free life-prolonging drugs with assistance from the Global Fund Against Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria Global. But a further 178,000 need AIDS treatment.

Nicholas Chitimba, who chairs Malawi's AIDS Commission, said more than 240 sites which are to be staffed by about 1,000 counsellors have been designated for HIV testing throughout the week.

He said the national campaign, which targets people aged between 14 and 49, was part of the countrys goal of testing one million Malawians by the end of 2007.

Malawi is one of only a few countries in southern Africa to have a national HIV testing campaign.

In May the UN AIDS agency said levels of the disease in southern Africa, the world's worst affected region, was showing no sign of diminishing, and blamed a failure of leadership for the lack of progress.

Some 14.9 million people in Southern Africa have AIDS, 38 percent of the worldwide total of 38.6 million people at the end of 2005.

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Chinese HIV victim detained after asking government for help
Beijing (AFP) Jul 20, 2006
A Chinese woman who contracted AIDS from a hospital blood transfusion was detained Thursday on suspicion of a serious crime after she asked the health ministry for more compensation, an activist said.







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