Prince
Harry joins Elton John to launch HIV campaign targeting men
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[July 25, 2018]
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Britain's Prince
Harry joined pop star Elton John on Tuesday to launch a campaign to
raise HIV awareness among men, warning that "dangerous complacency"
about the virus threatened the quest to wipe it out.
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The billion-dollar project "MenStar" will target men living with or
at risk of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, which has been ravaged by AIDS
since the 1980s.
"The MenStar coalition is bravely tackling the root cause of this
problem — the lack of awareness of HIV prevention amongst
hard-to-reach young men,” Harry said at the 22nd International AIDS
Conference in Amsterdam.
Speaking at the launch, which also featured South African actress
Charlize Theron and Ndaba Mandela, the grandson of late President
Nelson Mandela, Elton John said: "If we want to end AIDS once and
for all, we must make men part of the solution."
Around 36.7 million people around the world have HIV, according to
2016 figures cited by the United Nations' HIV/AIDS body UNAIDS.
Fewer than half of men living with HIV receive treatment compared
with 60 percent of women, it said.
"It is time there was a global coalition to teach men to protect
themselves. And in doing so, it will teach them to better protect
not only their wives and girlfriends, their sisters and daughters,
but also, critically, their brothers and their sons," the British
singer said.
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UNAIDS said this month that the fight against HIV/AIDS was "slipping
off track" and while deaths were falling and treatment rates rising,
rates of new HIV infections threatened to derail efforts to defeat
the disease.
Prince Harry said the campaign launch came at "a time when new
energetic and innovative solutions are needed more than ever
before".
"MenStar" is supported by the U.S. government’s PEPFAR program for
tackling HIV/AIDS and by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Experts at the conference hope for the elimination of AIDS worldwide
by 2030, but the United Nations warned last Wednesday of a funding
gap of £4.6 billion that threatens efforts.
(Reporting by Verity Crane; Writing by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by
Robin Pomeroy)
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