Menu

MSF statement on the High Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS final political declaration

10 Jun 21

Brussels, 10 June 2021. The UN high level meeting that has been held between 8 and 10 of June is the fourth UN High Level Meetings on AIDS to occur since the first case of HIV was diagnosed in 1981. While tremendous progress has been achieved over the last 40 years, MSF expresses its disappointment on the final political declaration and it is concerned that without strong global and country accountability and additional resources allocated to interventions with the most impact we will likely regress in the fight against the disease and loose the gains made. This is particularly true in a moment where most programs in the HIV response have shown gaps and delays under the COVID-19 crisis.

"A disappointing step in the fight against this killing disease"

“The 4th UN Declaration on AIDS is a disappointing step in the fight against this killing disease and very far from what was desperately needed today,"  says Dr Nomkhosi Mavuso, MSF Medical Representative, South Africa.

"While AIDS remains the leading cause of death among adolescent and young African women, Member States have shown the disregard for the lives of so many people by blocking and removing key parts of the first drafts of the declaration on several vital issues.”

During the negotiations of the Political Declaration on AIDS over the past few months, the lack of political will among member states to move collectively towards more progressive actions has been evident.

Mauricette Mounjou Waka, 28, learned she was HIV positive when admitted to the MSF-run advanced HIV unit at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Communautaire (CHUC) of Bangui, CAR. November 2020.

Strong language on social determinants of health, prevention, rights and community led responses have been regrettably contested.

"In 2021, it is shocking to see Member States blocking access to life saving medicines, refusing to acknowledge nor grant rights for the most vulnerable and marginalised, and resisting community led responses and leadership"

Dr Nomkhosi Mavuso, MSF Medical Representative, South Africa

“The declaration doesn’t recognize the rights and the urgent needs of some the most vulnerable and marginalized categories of people affected by AIDS and fails to value enough the critical work of communities and civil society organisations in the response."

"Ironically powerful countries commit to ending AIDS yet shamefully blocked and, in the final declaration, have deleted or watered-down critical texts addressing intellectual property (IP) barriers that would facilitate access to lifesaving medicines including for co-morbidities and co-infections”.

“In 2021, it is shocking to see Member States blocking access to life saving medicines, refusing to acknowledge nor grant rights for the most vulnerable and marginalised, and resisting community led responses and leadership” continues Mavuso.

"Omits strong language on some of the most deadly gaps"

According to MSF, the political declaration also omits strong language on some of the most deadly gaps and challenges of the response today to reduce mortality.

There is no mention of how programmes should address treatment failure, delayed initiation and treatment interruption, all of which lead to advanced HIV disease.

Severe bacterial and fungal infections which are next to TB the leading causes of morbidity and mortality among people living with HIV are also not mentioned at all within the text.

"The target of reducing HIV deaths below 250,000 by 2025 will simply not be met without interventions to prevent, diagnose and treat advanced HIV disease and addressing delayed start and interruption of care and treatment failure"

DR NOMKHOSI MAVUSO, MSF MEDICAL REPRESENTATIVE, SOUTH AFRICA

“The declaration fails to address why people continue to die from advanced HIV and the leading causes of death: TB but also severe bacterial and fungal infections."

A patient living with HIV/AIDS in Democratic Republic of Congo. As people who live with HIV in DRC still face a lot of stigma, she prefers not to identify herself.

"The target of reducing HIV deaths below 250,000 by 2025 will simply not be met without interventions to prevent, diagnose and treat advanced HIV disease and addressing delayed start and interruption of care and treatment failure."

{{ ctaright.node.field_explanation }}

"Member States seem to have forgotten that the previous UNAIDS target of less than 500,000 HIV-related deaths by 2020 has not been achieved and their new commitments are simply very far from the level of the urgency and the mobilization of resources that this issue would require.”

The Declaration calls for voluntary annual reporting on the progress of implementation of commitments by member states to UNAIDS.

However, country reporting must also be coupled with independent monitoring by civil society organizations and communities to hold governments to account on their commitments.

“Without tangible action behind the words of the new HIV global strategy and the political declaration, their implementation may not be sufficient to put the HIV response back on track by 2025. Too many people will be left behind to face HIV without a lifeline and too many people will die,” concludes Mavuso.

more on hiv/aids >