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HIV/AIDS

Egyptian film stars attempt to overcome HIV/AIDS stigma

I have to admit, it's got to take a lot of guts to speak out openly on a subject like HIV/AIDS in an ultra-conservative society. Even here in the U.S. there are people who believe HIV is a punishment more than a disease, so I can't imagine what it's like in other, more conservative parts of the world.

A lonely voice in a conservative society, rising Egyptian film star Amr Waked is speaking out against his country's unofficial policy of jailing people with AIDS.

"It's insane that this happens in our country," said Waked, whose controversial roles - including playing alongside an Israeli actor - have made him the target of media attacks.

Together with celebrity actor Khaled Abul Naga, who was recently appointed a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, Waked has taken on the task of getting Egypt to face the taboo of AIDS.

"The deliberate confusion (around the issue) must stop - stigmatization does not help the fight against AIDS," he said.

On April 9 a Cairo court jailed five men, four of them HIV-positive, for three years on charges of "debauchery" linked to homosexuality in what rights groups called a "witch hunt."

The five were forced to have HIV tests and were chained to hospital beds until the results were known.

"They have appealed the court ruling but remain in prison. We don't know if they have access to care," Wessam al-Beih, country director of UNAIDS, the United Nations program on HIV/AIDS, told AFP.

[...]

For Waked, "deep ignorance of AIDS is coupled with religious prejudices."

"These convictions will only further reinforce prejudices while making the fight against AIDS all the more difficult," he said.

Abul Naga echoes the view.

"The convictions are very worrying, increasing the idea that AIDS is not a disease to treat but a crime to punish," he said. "People will be too scared to take an HIV test voluntarily."

It's truly sad the level of ignorance people have with regard to this disease. And by sad, I mean really sad.

"It is a disease sent by God to punish sexual deviants," said Sheikh Mohammed Saleh from Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam's highest seat of learning.

For years, the authorities have denied or sought to minimize the existence of AIDS in Egypt, and even today official figures on people living with AIDS do not exist.

So kudos to Amr Waked and Khaled Abul Naga. Let's hope others join in their fight.

Annie Lennox to 'Sing' for Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

Annie LennoxAnnie Lennox held a special event Friday night in London to talk about her campaign to raise global awareness of HIV/AIDS in conjuntion with Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day on March 10th.

In December 2006, Annie Lennox invited 23 female singers to record with her on a song she had written in order to help to draw attention to the HIV/AIDS pandemic-especially in South Africa, where women and children are most seriously affected. Annie titled her song simply "Sing," and pledged the proceeds from its sales to the Treatment Action Campaign.

In support of the effort by Annie Lennox and TAC, The Body Shop will sell and distribute a special edition of "SING" at selected UK outlets from March 10-23 -- the first time that The Body Shop has ever sold music to the public. In addition, BBC Sports Relief have agreed to broadcast footage of TAC's work, which Annie documented in September 2007 during her two-week visit to some of the most seriously affected areas of South Africa.

For more information or to get involved, check out the Annie Lennox Sing website.

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