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Originally published September 12 2005

UN official accuses President Bush of "damaging" Africa

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

Stephen Lewis, the UN secretary general's special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, says President Bush's decision to cut funding for condoms and promote abstinence has "damaged" Africa by contributing to a condom shortage in Uganda, but, according to The People's Daily Online, Ugandan Health Minister Jim Muhwezi says there is no condom shortage.



A senior United Nations (UN) official has accused US President George W. Bush of "doing damage to Africa" by cutting funding for condoms, a move which may jeopardize the successful fight against HIV/AIDS in Uganda. Stephen Lewis, the UN secretary general's special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, said US cuts in funding for condoms and an emphasis on promoting abstinence had contributed to a shortage of condoms in Uganda, one of the few African countries which has succeeded in reducing its infection rate. "There is no doubt in my mind that the condom crisis in Uganda is being driven by (US policies)," said Lewis. "To impose a dogma-driven policy that is fundamentally flawed is doing damage to Africa." The condom shortage has developed because both the US and the Ugandan Government, which is the main donor for HIV/AIDS prevention, have allowed supplies to dwindle, according to an American pressure group, the Centre for Health and Gender Equity (CHGE). In 2003, US President Bush declared he would spend US$15 billion on his emergency plan for AIDS relief, but receiving aid under the programme has moral strings attached. Recipient countries have to emphasize abstinence over condoms, and - under a congressional amendment - they must condemn prostitution. Officially, Uganda remains committed to the threefold "ABC" policy. The initials stand for "Abstinence, Be faithful, use a Condom". The Ugandan Government denied on Monday that there is a scarcity of condoms or a policy change. The Health Minister Jim Muhwezi said: "It is not true that there is a condom shortage. There seems to be a co-ordinated smear campaign by those who do not want to use any other alternative simultaneously with condoms against AIDS." The minister insisted that condoms remain an important part of their HIV prevention strategy.


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