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Africa Aids orphans 'may top 18m'

BBC News - October 25, 2005


UN charity Unicef says 18 million children in sub-Saharan Africa could be orphaned by Aids by the end of 2010.

It also says that every minute, a child is infected with HIV and another child dies from an Aids-related illness.

The charity says children are being overlooked in the global fight against HIV and Aids.

Unicef says only 5% of HIV-positive children get medical help, and fewer than 10% of the 15 million already orphaned by Aids get financial support.

Unicef's executive director Ann Veneman said children were the "invisible face" of a very visible disease and were missing out on the help that adults received.

"It is critical that the world unite for children and unite against Aids. The size of the problem is staggering, but the scale of the response has been inadequate," she said.

'Years of neglect'

The children's charity is launching a global campaign, Unite For Children, Unite Against Aids, which will focus on Africa, but also target Central Asia and Eastern Europe.

The campaign will focus on preventing mother-to-child transmission, educating young people on how to protect themselves, and on making sure HIV-positive children get the medical treatment they need.

Although sub-Saharan Africa is the focus, Unicef says 80% of all those living with HIV in Eastern Europe and Central Asia are under 30, and that rates of infection are climbing faster there than anywhere else in the world.

The BBC's East Africa correspondent, Karen Allen, says Unicef is using Kenya to highlight what it says are years of neglect of youngsters either infected or affected by Aids.

She says the campaign is calling for cash subsidies to pay for school fees, food, and shelter, transforming the lives of youngsters who might otherwise be forced into prostitution or crime.

Nairobi-based Unicef adviser, Naisiadet Mason, an HIV-infected mother of two, said the campaign was long overdue.

"The time for the blame game is over. We are asking for collective action... from governments downwards," she told the Reuters news agency.

"The day I was told I was HIV positive I was devastated and alone. We must create the networks, remove the stigma, supply the drugs," she said.

"We want to get HIV treated as just another disease because we know it is manageable."


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