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"I've see in President Zuma a person who's willing to listen, and say, `Here I am, come with your views, and let's turn your views into an effective campaign to combat the spread" of AIDS, said Ranthako, who works with a group that raises awareness about AIDS among men. In some ways, Zuma is an unlikely AIDS hero. In 2006, while being tried on charges of raping an HIV-positive family friend, he was ridiculed for testifying that he took a shower after sex to lower the risk of AIDS. He was acquitted of rape. Zuma, a one-time chairman of the country's national AIDS council, may never live down the shower comment. But he has won praise for appointing Dr. Aaron Motsoaledi as his health minister. AIDS activists say Motsoaledi trusts science and is willing to learn from past mistakes. South Africa, a nation of about 50 million, has an estimated 5.7 million people infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS
-- more than any other country in the world. The health minister under Zuma's predecessor distrusted drugs developed to keep AIDS patients alive, instead promoting garlic treatments. Zuma's government has set a target of getting 80 percent of those who need AIDS drugs on them by 2011. A Harvard study of the years under President Thabo Mbeki, who questioned the link between HIV and AIDS, concluded that more than 300,000 premature deaths in South Africa could have been prevented had officials here acted sooner to provide drug treatments to AIDS patients and to prevent pregnant women with HIV from passing the virus to their children. After Zuma won a power struggle within the governing African National Congress, the party forced Mbeki to step down late last year after almost a decade as president. Zuma took over after elections in April. The crowd that had greeted Zuma like a rock star before his speech rose to their feet when Zuma finished Tuesday. Then he danced along with a choir that sang: "Zuma, you are blessed."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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