World AIDS Day Message from Dr. Edward Greene, UN Secretary General Special Envoy for HIV in the Caribbean

Nov 30, 2014

(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown, Guyana)     This World AIDS Day brings with it the realization that in less than 400 days the Millennium Development Goals would have expired. It is clear that some targets would not have been achieved. Among them, are those associated with the response to HIV and AIDS. Yet there is much to celebrate. People with AIDS are living longer, many more are on antiretroviral treatment and there are greater techniques for accelerating prevention, effective financing, governance and accountability for AIDS related programmes. These are all essential requirements for closing the gap and ushering an AIDS free generation.
UNAIDS has provided the impetus for getting to Zero with an ambitious 90-90-90 goal. It requires that by 2020, 90% of those infected get tested; 90% of those tested having access to treatment and 90% of those on treatment registering low enough viral loads, preventing transmission.  The science shows that by meeting these targets the end of the AIDS epidemic by 2030 is possible.

Let us therefore take the opportunity afforded by World AIDS day to reach those vulnerable populations and those most in need. Let us resolve to eliminate inequalities, and reduce gender violence and stigma and discrimination; cinders that fan the flames of HIV and AIDS.

While we must continue to advocate for retaining AIDS in the post 2015 sustainable development agenda, we also need to recognize that the emerging global health architecture is being designed to respond more adequately on global health challenges. These require an integrated health response based less on disease specific silos of HIV,  TB, malaria, women’s and children’s health, NCDs and Ebola while targeting disease specific measures to control their respective burdens and spread and avoid the emergence of epidemic. The pillars of the new global architecture rest on multisectoral collaboration, universal access, partnerships based on shared responsibility and global solidarity.   
 
 

You may also be interested in:

Dr Carla Barnett, Secretary General of the Caribbean Community
REMARKS: Dr Carla Barnett, CARICOM Secretary-General Opening Ceremony - 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of CARICOM Heads of Government
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, I will adopt the protocols already established for this afternoon’s proceedings, but would still like to acknowledge:
caricom_admin
Hon. Shirley Botchwey at the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Heads of Government Meeting
Statement by Commonwealth Secretary-General at the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of CARICOM Heads of Government Meeting
It is a profound honour to join you here in beautiful Basseterre — hosted so generously by Prime Minister Drew and the people of Saint Kitts and Nevis — at this 50th Meeting of the Conference of He
caricom_admin