BBC News - Monday, November 13, 2001
A group of seven people with Aids who travelled from Dongguan village in the central province of Henan to the capital, Beijing, told the BBC they had been excluded from the conference.
A member of the group, Zhao Yong, said it was a great pity they had not been allowed to attend the meeting. They were infected by blood banks that had illegally recycled donated blood.
The executive director of the United Nations Aids programme, Peter Piot, told the BBC the conference was a clear signal from the Chinese authorities that there would be more openness in dealing with Aids.
He said the conference, involving more than 2,000 delegates and hundreds of journalists, was a point of no return.
But, addressing the plight of those refused entry, he said: "There isn't a tradition in China to involve the ordinary man and woman in the street to address problems."
Refused entry
The authorities said earlier this year that up to 50,000 people could have been infected with HIV, the virus that leads to Aids, through blood transfusions.
In some villages, 65% of the people have been infected in this way.
"Sometimes the government won't even talk to us."
Huge problem
Inside the conference a man infected with HIV told delegates of his feelings of isolation and despair when he discovered his illness.
He was applauded for his courage, the official Xinhua news agency reported.
China's Health Minister Zhang Wenkang said more than 600,000 people in China were now infected with HIV. International experts say the government has vastly underestimated the true figure.
More than half a million people in Henan Province alone are thought to have become infected by selling their blood to commercial blood dealers during the 1990s.
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