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Woman as Reason by Maya Jhansi
News & Letters, July 2001


AIDS reveals sickness of capitalism

On June 25-27, the first global summit to discuss the greatest disease catastrophe in human history was convened by the UN. At least 22 million people have died of AIDS in the last 20 years. Over 36 million live with the AIDS virus--25 million live on the continent of Africa. In Botswana, with the highest rate of AIDS in the world, 38.8 % of people 18-49 years old, and nearly half of women in their 20s, are infected with HIV. An article in THE NATION rightly called this reality global apartheid.

It's so strange that people refer to the AIDS pandemic as a "ravage of nature" or the act of a vengeful god. In fact it is nothing but dirty capitalist politics--the disease may not be, but the pandemic is. Why did it take so long for the world's leaders (not all of them, none from the "developed" world) to finally get together to discuss it?

LIMITATIONS OF THE UN

So what came out of this conference? A watered down Declaration of Commitment that bowed to pressures by Islamic fundamentalists and the Vatican to drop gays, drug users and prostitutes from being singled out as especially vulnerable groups. They also fought inclusion of wording about the right of women to control their sexual lives, but lost.

The Declaration highlights prevention over treatment, setting up deadlines for governments to bring down the rate of infection, but virtually ignoring the millions without access to life-saving drugs. So far, the only positive effect of the conference was that the U.S. felt pressured to drop its lawsuit against Brazil for manufacturing and distributing for free some U.S. patented AIDS drugs.

Like the disease itself, this crisis is so manifold and nefarious that our response can't be filtered down to one or another program. In fact, this issue has rekindled an important dimension of the anti-globalization movement. ACT-UP, which had dwindled into inactivity in the last decade, has remobilized itself into a smaller but more diverse group calling for the canceling of Third World debts and access to AIDS drugs for all people.

They led a rally in New York before the conference that suggests a new opening for a more comprehensive response to the epidemic than the UN is unlikely to provide on its own. However, this dimension of the anti-globalization movement, like all the others, needs to go deeper into the issues, to uncover a truly viable opposition to this insanely inhuman world. Nothing shows this better than the impact of AIDS on women.

Nearly half of the world's 36 million people infected with HIV are women--and the number is growing. Women now make up 60% of new infections. In sub-Saharan Africa, teen-age girls are five times more likely to be infected than boys. In the U.S. a 2001 Kaiser Foundation Report found that women make up a growing number of new HIV infections, and that women of color are "hardest hit." Although Black women are only 13% of U.S. females over age 13, they account for 63% of the AIDS cases among women in that age group.

The response of the UN is inadequate. While UNAIDS signed an agreement with the UN Development Fund for Women to fight the gender inequity that facilitates the spread of AIDS, it had only a very few sessions on women and AIDS at the global conference.

To make matters worse, UNAIDS singled out men as the focus for World Aids Day both this year and last. Their logic is telling. In their statement about the World AIDS Day campaign, they argue that, "All over the world, women find themselves at special risk of HIV infection because of their lack of power to determine where, when and how sex takes place. What is less recognized, however, is that the cultural beliefs and expectations that make this the case also heighten men's own vulnerability."

SEXISM AND AIDS

How can they use patriarchy and violence against women as an excuse to focus on men? Not only do they argue that men are more affected by AIDS, but they believe that only through mobilizing men will any of the problems implicated in the spread of AIDS be stopped. This displays a blatant disregard for women's self-determination.

This disregard for women's self-determination is at the core of everything. The conditions that have led to the increased rate of AIDS in women include their lack of power and control over their own bodies, their susceptibility to violence and rape, and their inability to force a man to use a condom.

Indeed, as African feminists have pointed out, the threat and fear of AIDS has made matters worse for African women. The fear of AIDS is one cause of the continued and sometimes increased practice of female genital mutilation. Many see it as a protection against AIDS. In fact, it increases women's chances of getting AIDS when they do have intercourse because of cutting and trauma in the area. In addition, younger and younger girls are being pushed into prostitution and marriage, both of which put young girls at risk of contracting AIDS.

The feeble declarations of the UN will do very little, in the end, to fight this deadly reality. This is something women have learned since the much touted Beijing women's conference in 1995. At that time, a lot of similar declarations were made, but women, especially when it comes to AIDS, are worse off now. It's fine that the global summit brought worldwide attention to the AIDS pandemic, but until the inhuman logic of an inhuman world is challenged at its root, we will not be able to eradicate this plague. Without that, the priorities of the medical world, of drug companies, governments and leaders will remain as they are. The virtual holocaust that Africa faces (5-7 million expected to die by 2010 in South Africa alone) makes this absolutely unacceptable. There is no time to waste.

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