Bush’s AIDS/Africa Policy

Ken AshfordBush & Co., Foreign Affairs, Sex/Morality/Family ValuesLeave a Comment

Bush likes to talk about how he is helping fight AIDS in Africa by, among other things, "build[ing] the health system capacity" there.

Yeah, right.

Bush’s war against AIDS in Africa has a strong enemy: Bush himself.  Like his approach to terrorism, Bush’s unreality-based views of the world are merely prolonging the problem he seeks to prevent:

A senior United Nations official has accused President George Bush of "doing damage to Africa" by cutting funding for condoms, a move which may jeopardise the successful fight against HIV/Aids in Uganda.

Stephen Lewis, the UN secretary general’s special envoy for HIV/Aids in Africa, said US cuts in funding for condoms and an emphasis on promoting abstinence had contributed to a shortage of condoms in Uganda, one of the few African countries which has succeeded in reducing its infection rate.

"There is no doubt in my mind that the condom crisis in Uganda is being driven by [US policies]," Mr Lewis said yesterday. "To impose a dogma-driven policy that is fundamentally flawed is doing damage to Africa."

The condom shortage has developed because both the Ugandan government and the US, which is the main donor for HIV/Aids prevention, have allowed supplies to dwindle, according to an American pressure group, the Centre for Health and Gender Equity (Change).

In 2003, President Bush declared he would spend $15bn on his emergency plan for Aids relief, but receiving aid under the programme has moral strings attached.

Recipient countries have to emphasise abstinence over condoms, and – under a congressional amendment – they must condemn prostitution.