On World AIDS Day, Crisis Persists
Calls For Renewed Commitment To Stop Disease That's Killed 25 Million
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Play CBS Video Video Bush Remarks On World AIDS Day CBS News RAW: On World AIDS Day, President Bush reiterated the U.S. commitment to fighting the HIV/AIDS virus that affects more than 40 million people worldwide.
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Video Fighting AIDS Around The World David Gartner, policy director of the Global AIDS Alliance, discusses the global battle against HIV with CBS News Correspondent Melissa McDermott.
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Video Fighting AIDS At Home Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health discusses how government agencies are fighting AIDS/HIV in the U.S.
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Two young girls hold banners while marching on the streets of Harare, Zimbabwe, during World AIDS Day event, Dec. 1, 2005. (AP)
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Students dressed as skeletons participate, in an AIDS awareness rally in Agartala, capital of India's northeastern state of Tripura, Dec. 1, 2005. (AP)
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Students hold candles during a rally to mark World AIDS Day in Jakarta. Indonesia, Dec. 1, 2005. (AP)
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German Novice Desidia, right, of "The Free Sisters of the Perpetual Indulgence Association" sells red ribbons to tram passengers to raise awareness for World AIDS Day, in Berlin, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2005. (AP)
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AIDS activists hold lanterns during a rally to celebrate World Aids Day, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2005, in Taipei, Taiwan. (AP)
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Photo Essay World AIDS Day Public events around the globe raise awareness of a deadly killer.
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Interactive AIDS: The Modern Pandemic A history of AIDS, U.S. statistics, health facts and a look at how the epidemic has spread.
"Because of this publicity, I really feel I learned something about the harm of AIDS and I will share what I learned with my co-workers, friends and relatives," said Li Hongjian, a young worker with a large red ribbon pinned to his chest.
China's government estimates about 840,000 people could be infected with HIV and 80,000 others are likely to be living with full-blown AIDS. However, only about 167,000 are registered as being infected.
"We still have a long way to go in AIDS prevention, we cannot slack off in doing this work," said China's Vice Prime Minister Wu Yi at the launch.
UNAIDS has warned up to 10 million could be infected in China by 2010 without more aggressive prevention.
From the far reaches of the globe, solidarity was shown with the world's AIDS sufferers.
Thousands of candles were to illuminate the Swedish winter gloom, with anti-AIDS vigils planned for the capital, Stockholm, and a southern city, Malmo.
The British government marked World AIDS Day by contributing $48 million to the global fight against the disease.
Estonia's National Institute for Health Development campaigned for increased tolerance and better integration of HIV-infected persons into Estonian society Thursday. With over 5,000 diagnosed cases, Estonia — a tiny nation with 1.4 million inhabitants — has one of the highest numbers of HIV-infections in Europe, spreading in the country mainly through drug use.
World religious leaders also added their voices to calls for renewed commitment to fight the disease.
Speaking Wednesday during his weekly public audience to several thousand pilgrims and tourists gathered in the rain in St. Peter's Square, Pope Benedict XVI called the figures on AIDS victims "alarming" and reiterated the church's commitment to the care of the sick.
In a statement, Archbishop Christodoulos, head of the Orthodox Church of Greece, said AIDS sufferers "should not lose their faith in God but see this major trial as a spiritual opportunity."
World Aids Day, meant to boost awareness of the disease, didn't grab everyone's attention.
The day's events were canceled by royal decree Thursday in Swaziland, among the most-infected countries and Africa's last absolute monarchy, because they clashed with a traditional ceremony scheduled for the same day.
The announcement shocked activists in a country of 1 million where more than 38 percent of adults are infected with HIV — the highest infection rate in the world.
Only a few dozen joined a procession in Nigeria's biggest city of Lagos.
"Since I believe I don't have it, I don't see why I should march," said Mufu Adebajo, a 22-year-old craftsman watching from his roadside stand. "Otherwise, people will think I have it."
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