BBC News - Sunday, 5 August, 2001
"You must not allow Aids to ravage our armed forces," the Reuters news agency quoted him saying at a meeting of high-ranking officers in the south-western city of Ibadan.
He promised that stocks of condoms would be provided in clinics at military barracks for distribution to military personnel - especially those going abroad on assignment.
The president - himself a retired general - said that during his time in the army, it was an offence to contract a sexually-transmitted disease.
"Now it's only an offence if you conceal it," he said.
Fighting Aids
Nigerian military commanders have disclosed that hundreds of soldiers returning from peacekeeping missions in such places as Liberia and Sierra Leone have been found to be infected with the HIV virus that causes Aids.
Mr Obasanjo is leading efforts to encourage Africa's leaders to publicly address the problem and confront it as a major problem afflicting the continent.
The disease has devastated large areas of Africa - current estimates say it will kill 50 million Africans in the next decade alone.
Nigeria, which is Africa's most populous country, has been relatively less badly hit - a 1999 study found that one in 20 Nigerians were affected by the Aids virus.
But experts say the disease could grow in the West African nation if it is not effectively contained.
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