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UN Chief Urges Global Unity to End AIDS by 2030

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for political will to finish the global HIV fight at a high-level UN General Assembly meeting. He noted that AIDS-related deaths have dropped 70% since 2004, but 9.2 million people still lack treatment. Guterres proposed five acceleration pathways, including closing gaps in access and protecting human rights. He emphasized that ending AIDS by 2030 is a shared global responsibility.

UN chief urges political will to accelerate, finish global HIV fight

United Nations, June 22

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday called for political will to accelerate and finish the global HIV fight at a high-level meeting of the UN General Assembly.

"This is a meeting that is taking place to find solutions, and once again summon the political will to accelerate and finish the global HIV fight," Guterres said in a statement delivered by UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed at the Opening Plenary of the High-level Meeting on HIV/AIDS, Xinhua news agency reported.

Guterres said that in the 45 years since the first case of AIDS was reported, the world has demonstrated uncommon resolve and solidarity, which "wasn't easy."

Thanks to the political commitment and resolve shown by governments and investments by global partners, AIDS-related deaths have been reduced by 70 per cent since their peak in 2004, and by 54 per cent in 2010, he said.

According to the secretary-general, HIV prevention and treatment services have reduced new infections by 40 per cent since 2010, and today more than 32 million people living with HIV are receiving lifesaving antiretroviral therapy.

However, "AIDS is not over," with 9.2 million people in need still lacking access to HIV treatment at the end of 2024, said Guterres.

He proposed five "essential" acceleration pathways: closing the widening gaps in access to prevention, treatment and care services; continuing to ensure the leadership of communities in the HIV response; protecting human rights; securing financing; and reviving the multilateral spirit that has driven the HIV response from the very start.

"The HIV response has shown that solidarity across borders and sectors can overcome fear, inequality and injustice. And it has proven that global, regional and local institutions are all essential to deliver together," he said.

Noting that the meeting is a chance to demonstrate that the international community can rally once again around science, human dignity, solidarity and shared responsibility, the UN chief said that "the responsibility to end AIDS as a public threat by 2030 belongs to each and every one of us."

— IANS

Reader Comments

Michael C

Impressive progress - 70% reduction in AIDS-related deaths is remarkable. But 9.2 million without treatment is still a massive gap. As someone working in healthcare in Mumbai, I see how antiretroviral therapy has transformed lives. Yet we need better distribution networks, especially in states like Bihar and UP where infrastructure is weak.

Anushka E

Five acceleration pathways sound good on paper, but where is the concrete plan? India contributes significantly to the global HIV fight through generic drug manufacturing, but the UN needs to address patent issues that keep medicines expensive in developing nations. Otherwise, political will remains just rhetoric. 🤔

Sarah B

The community leadership point is spot on. In Chennai, we have peer educators who have done wonders in reaching high-risk groups. But governments often ignore grassroots organisations. If they truly listened to local NGOs and community health workers, we'd see faster progress. Solidarity across borders must start at home.

Vishal D

Respectfully, this feels like the same speech we hear every year. The UN talks about political will, but look at the ground reality - in 2025, we still have people dying of AIDS in India because they can't afford consistent treatment. Stop the fancy jargon and actually fund the programs. Show us the money, not just the words! 😤

Priya S

"AIDS is not over" - this is the most honest line. In India's conservative society, many families hide HIV status even from neighbours. We need destigmatization at every level - schools, workplaces, villages. It's good that the UN mentions human rights protection, but in practice, HIV-positive people in India still face discrimination in jobs and marriage.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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