Homophobia and disappointments in the search
for a vaccine were expected to dominate the 17th International AIDS
Conference as an estimated 25,000 scientists, politicians, physicians
and activists gathered in Mexico City.
UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon told the conference on its opening day Sunday that
discrimination against gays must end and called for countries to expand
AIDS-prevention programmes for the high-risk group.
It is
the first such AIDS conference in Latin America since the epidemic
began in the 1980s. The gathering, expected to be the largest to date
for the biennial conference, is to end Friday.
Mexican
President Felipe Calderon, former Botswana president Festus Mogae and
St Kitts and Nevis President Denzil Douglas each called for the end of
discrimination against gay men.
Mogae was one of the first
African leaders to publicly undergo an HIV test to set an example for
his countrymen and -women.
Thousands of people
demonstrated in the streets of the Mexican capital against homophobia.
Gay men represent one-fourth of the new infections in Latin America.
Jorge Saavedra Lopez, the director general of Mexico's National
Centre for Prevention and Control of HIV/AIDS and the country's first
openly gay person to serve as a senior government official, is directly
involved in the fight to reduce discrimination.
'It is difficult to evaluate the extent of homophobia in our country,' he said.
The world AIDS community received sobering news recently that a giant
US public research programme was pulling the plug on the testing of a
vaccine that had raised hopes at the conference two years ago in
Toronto, Canada.
Dr Anthony Fauci, who heads the US
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Seth Berkley,
president of the New York-based International AIDS Vaccine Initiative;
and other leading world researchers are to speak at the conference.
Some AIDS activists have called for the estimated 700 million
dollars spent annually on research to be channeled into providing more
of the antiretroviral drug therapy for disadvantaged populations, such
as those in Africa.
On Friday, Latin American health
ministers committed to a programme of expanded sex education for young
people about preventive measures against HIV.
More than a
quarter of a century since AIDS was first identified, 25 million people
have died and an estimated 33.2 million people are currently living
with HIV/AIDS.