Comments 
        by Sandra Thurman 
        Director, Office of National AIDS Policy
      US 
        Conference on AIDS 
        November 
        6, 1999
       
       [Comments as delivered may be different] 
       I am very 
        pleased to be with you here today in this beautiful city. My thanks to 
        NMAC and the conference sponsors for bringing all of us together. For 
        many of us who have been at this for a while, this conference is like 
        a homecoming. We get to see so many old friends, catch up, share our memories, 
        and tell a few war stories. 
      I very 
        much appreciate the opportunity to be here with these ambassadors of hope, 
        and want to thank them on behalf of all of us for taking the time to join 
        us here. Like so many of you, these are heroes in the global struggle. 
         
      I also 
        appreciate your allowing me a few moments to talk with you about the international 
        AIDS pandemic. It is testament to our growing spirit and energy that we 
        can unite our continued efforts to address the AIDS epidemic here in the 
        United States with the millions of people around the world who share our 
        commitment to stopping this epidemic. 
      ------------------ 
      It has 
        been said that when we look into the eyes of a child, we can see the whole 
        of the universe. My friends, today the eyes of our children reveal a world 
        devastated by AIDS. 
      The sad 
        truth is - our battle against AIDS is far from over. And now more than 
        ever, we must be vigilant against the growing misperception that AIDS 
        is no longer a lethal threat --- a misperception that too many are only 
        too eager to embrace. 
      We have 
        reached a decisive moment in the struggle that has already robbed us of 
        far too many of our loved ones - brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, 
        parents and partners. 
      And we 
        are now called upon to choose between determined action and the tragic 
        consequences of complacency. We must not bow down to the temptations of 
        fear, denial, and blame, or find false comfort in the well-intentioned 
        words of our own past promises. 
      Together, 
        we can and we must use our small successes and recent signs of hope - 
        not as an invitation to rest but as a foundation for facing the future 
        - and for fighting on. 
      AIDS is 
        a plague of Biblical proportion, and it is claiming more lives than all 
        armed conflicts in this century combined. While many of us have witnessed 
        its devastation firsthand, it is almost impossible to describe the grip 
        that AIDS has on villages across Africa and on communities around the 
        world.  
      Twelve 
        million men, women and children in Africa have already died of AIDS. Today 
        and everyday, AIDS buries more than 5,500 Africans - and that number will 
        more than double in the next few years. AIDS is now the leading cause 
        of death among all people of all ages in Africa - as it is for young adult 
        African-American men here in the United States.  
      And the 
        epidemic rages on. Each day, 11,000 people in Africa become HIV infected 
        - one every 8 seconds. Most of these new infections are among young people 
        under the age of 25, and more than half are women. By 2005, more than 
        100 million people worldwide will have been infected with HIV.  
      In a host 
        of different ways and from a variety of different vantage points, it is 
        increasingly children and families who are caught in the crossfire of 
        this relentless epidemic.  
      In Africa, 
        an entire generation is in jeopardy. Within the next decade, more than 
        40 million children will have lost one or both parents to AIDS. 40 million. 
        That is almost the same number as all children in public school in the 
        entire United States -- or all children living east of the Mississippi 
        river. Left unchecked, this tragedy will continue to escalate for at least 
        another 30 years. 
      In just 
        a few short years, AIDS has wiped out decades of hard work and steady 
        progress in development -- and will soon double infant mortality, triple 
        child mortality, and slash life expectancy by 20 years or more. In South 
        Africa, from 60 to 40. In Zimbabwe, from 65 to 39, and in Zambia, from 
        56 to 37.  
      In the 
        same way, years of effort to improve the social and economic standing 
        of women has been eroded by AIDS. With families struggling to care for 
        large numbers of orphans, it is the girls who are often forced to drop 
        out of school and help care for the family. Women are often left with 
        no way to protect themselves from infection-even when they know they are 
        at risk. 
      You have 
        heard the stories of the terrible plight of so many women in South Africa 
        who live under the daily threat of rape. Compounding that brutality is 
        the increasing likelihood of infection by HIV and other STDs. We must 
        do all that we can to join their struggle, to reverse the legacy of violence. 
      AIDS has 
        not only had a devastating impact on individual women, children and families, 
        but is also threatening the economic and political stability of entire 
        nations. We must move beyond thinking of AIDS just as a health issue - 
        AIDS is a human rights issue, a development issue, a trade and investment 
        issue, and a security and civil society issue.  
      Yet my 
        message to you today is not one of hopelessness and desolation. On the 
        contrary, I hope to share with you a sense of optimism. For amidst all 
        of this tragedy, there is hope. Amidst this terrible crisis, there is 
        opportunity: the opportunity for us-working together-to empower women, 
        to protect children, and to support these mayors and those like them throughout 
        the world in our shared struggle against AIDS.  
      As many 
        of you know, last World AIDS Day the President directed us to lead a fact 
        finding mission to sub-Saharan Africa and to report back with recommendations 
        for an enhanced US battle plan for our global fight against AIDS.  
      In response 
        to the findings of that trip, this past July the Administration launched 
        a new global AIDS initiative the cornerstone of which is a $100 million 
        increase in the US government's global AIDS effort for fiscal year 2000. 
        That more than doubles our financial commitment to the fight against AIDS 
        in Africa. 
      This will 
        be used to assist countries in developing systems of prevention; home 
        and community based care and treatment; supports for children orphaned 
        by AIDS; and the infrastructure and the capacity needed to effectively 
        implement these vital efforts.  
      I am pleased 
        to report that despite all of the wrangling going on in Washington these 
        days, it looks like we're going to get most if not all of this new funding. 
         
        This investment is a significant increase in our global battle against 
        AIDS - one that begins to reflect the magnitude of this rapidly escalating 
        pandemic. It will more than double our funding for prevention and care 
        programs in Africa, and it will challenge our G7 and other partners to 
        also step up to the plate.  
      We must 
        build on this new energy to increase US support for communities struggling 
        with this epidemic in other parts of the world including Latin America; 
        the Caribbean; and Asia. Our partnership with Africa must be a starting 
        point, not an ending point. 
      After eighteen 
        years of living in the shadow of AIDS, we must come together to give strength 
        to each other.  
      With more 
        than 50% of new infections in this country happening in communities of 
        color, the epidemic in this country now mirrors the epidemic in the rest 
        of the world. We must come together to nurture a vision of unity, compassion, 
        and empowerment, a vision born and renewed in churches, mosques, and temples 
        around the world. 
      Battered 
        by the storms of ignorance, indifference, and discrimination that still 
        surround AIDS, we must come together to raise our voices for healing, 
        for hope and for change.  
       In the 
        words of Fredrick Douglas: 
      
        "It 
          is not light that is needed, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, 
          but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake. The 
          feeling of the nation must be quickened and the conscience must be roused." 
         
        We must come together to build the fire that will light our way, and to 
        stomp our feet and raise our voices until the thunder is heard across 
        this nation and indeed around the world. 
      If we do, 
        then our grandchildren's children can look back and talk with pride of 
        a great people who found courage amidst confusion and uncertainty, who 
        believed in their own strength and in each other, and who embraced their 
        faith in order to put spirit into action.  
      And then 
        and only then, in their eyes will shine the whole of the universe - a 
        world that together fought AIDS - and lived on. 
      Our battle 
        against AIDS in an integral part of our broader struggle for equality, 
        for justice, and for life. We have so much work left to do to address 
        AIDS here in this country, and so much that we can share with our brothers 
        and sisters around the world. 
      Far too 
        many in this rich nation still go without proper care and support. Far 
        too many still face homelessness and isolation. Far too many still face 
        impoverishment because of their illness.  
      We are 
        far, far from the end of this terrible plague. There is no time to rest. 
        For the sake of all those living with HIV and AIDS, and threatened by 
        its devastation, we must fight on. 
      Let us 
        join together in what Archbishop Desmond Tutu has called our 'holy war' 
        and do as we have promised to those who have passed before us. Remember 
        those old words of our nation's struggle for civil rights: 
      
        Sing 
          a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us; 
          Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us; 
          Facing the rising sun of our new day begun,  
          Let us march on, till victory is won. 
         
       
        
       
      
       
        
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