9/12/2005
New Initiative To Tackle Violence-AIDS Link
Two
United Nations agencies along with Johnson & Johnson,
the global manufacturer and provider of health care products
and services, this week announced new grants for organizations
tackling the perilous correlation between gender-based violence
and the spread of HIV and AIDS.
Under the initiative, contributions from the company, the Joint
UN
Programme on HIV/AIDS and the UN Development Fund for Women
(UNIFEM) will
go to groups in ten developing countries.
UNIFEM’s Executive Director, Noeleen Heyzer, welcomed
the partnership, pointing to the importance of public-private
initiatives in contributing needed resources to the fight against
gender-based violence and the AIDS epidemic.
She said in the coming year, the Trust Fund would “support
innovative community initiatives to raise awareness and spur
public action, provide medical, psycho-social and legal assistance
to survivors of violence and women living with HIV, and support
HIV-positive women’s networks to diminish stigma.”
Dr. Anu Gupta, Director of Johnson & Johnson Corporate
Contributions, said the grants will help women “who have
become infected with HIV/AIDS as a result of violence or who
suffer escalated violence due to their HIV-positive status.”
Praising Johnson & Johnson for its contribution, Deborah
Landey, Deputy-Executive Director of UNAIDS said the initiative
was critical. “There is an urgent need for programmes
like this one that provide funds to community initiatives that
directly benefit women in developing countries.”
Data from around the globe show a growing link between gender-based
violence and HIV, particularly among young women. Studies from
Rwanda, Tanzania and South Africa indicate that the risk for
HIV among women who have experienced violence may be up to
three times higher than among those who have not. Sexual violence,
increasingly prevalent in recent conflicts around the world,
is fuelling the spread of the disease. During the 1994 Rwandan
genocide, a large majority of the estimated 250,000 women who
were raped contracted HIV.
Projects receiving support include community initiatives targeting
social groups that have suffered spikes in rates of HIV-infection
and gender-based violence, cultural radio programmes, and assistance
to survivors of violence and women living with HIV/AIDS in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Vietnam, India and Haiti.
The grants were awarded as part of the UNIFEM-managed UN Trust
Fund to Eliminate Violence against Women.