QUEENSTOWN, South Africa, July 13, 2005

Melee Over AIDS Drugs In S. Africa

Police Fired Rubber Bullets At Protestors Demanding Treatment

  •  (AP / CBS)

  • Interactive AIDS: The Modern Pandemic

    A history of AIDS, U.S. statistics, health facts and a look at how the epidemic has spread.

(AP)  Police fired rubber bullets and smoke grenades to disperse hundreds of protesters demanding the government speed up the provision of life-prolonging AIDS drugs, officials said Wednesday.

More than 20 people were injured — one of them seriously — in the melee Tuesday at Frontier Hospital in Queenstown in the Eastern Cape, according to activists from the Treatment Action Campaign.

Police said there were no casualties at the scene, but some people may have been hurt in the stampede of people fleeing the area.

Hospital staff called the police when protesters forced their way into wards, intimidated staff and disrupted services, Health Department spokesman Sizwe Kutelo said. The TAC maintained the demonstration was peaceful.

Police spokesman Superintendent Gcinikaya Taleni said organizers did not notify authorities of their intention to demonstrate, as required.

He confirmed rubber bullets and smoke grenades were used to disperse the crowd, which he put at over 1,500, but said any injuries were as a result of the stampede.

The government has drawn criticism for its sluggish response to the AIDS pandemic, which kills more than 600 people a day in South Africa, according to U.N. estimates. Until last year, it refused to provide anti-retroviral drugs through the national health system, citing cost and safety concerns.

It has now pledged to provide treatment to all who need it within five years, but activists complain the process of getting those who qualify on anti-retrovirals has been plagued by bureaucratic and other delays.

"Despite government's expressed commitment to provide treatment to people with AIDS, many people die without treatment while still on waiting lists," the TAC said in a statement Wednesday.

Kutelo insisted the Eastern Cape province was committed to the program, but said patients need to be screened and treated for any current infections before they start on anti-retrovirals.

Kutelo said the province met its target of getting 2,700 patients on treatment by March 2005 and aimed to increase the number to 15,169 by March 2006. So far, 6,420 patients are receiving anti-retrovirals through the government program, while 10,094 remain on waiting lists, he said.


©MMV, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

60 Minutes

The secrets of tennis legend Andre Agassi; the growing threat of cyber wars; and more.
Read More

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • The Fall Of The Berlin Wall The Fall Of The Berlin Wall

    Looking Back at the Wall that Once Divided Germany On the 20th Anniversary of Its Collapse

  • Patricia Clarkson Patricia Clarkson

    Television and Film Actress, Yale School of Drama Graduate and Academy Award Nominee

  • Day in Pictures Day in Pictures

    A Glimpse at the Day's News as Seen Through a Camera Lens

  • Andre Agassi Andre Agassi

    Former Top-Seeded Tennis Star, Gossip Column Favorite and Philanthropist

  • Yankees Victory Parade Yankees Victory Parade

    The Yankees Celebrate Their 27th World Series Championship with a Ticker-Tape Parade Up Broadway

  • Orlando Office Shooting Orlando Office Shooting

    A Gunman Opens Fire at the Offices of an Engineering Firm Where He Once Worked

Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: