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Alicia Keys

Alicia Keys

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Treatment Can Stop HIV/AIDS in its Tracks

Posted: 06/ 9/11 02:13 PM ET

On Tuesday, I had the privilege of speaking at the United Nations' Women Global Coalition on HIV/AIDS and I wanted to share this experience with you. I've included the video of my speech (at the bottom of this post) and am sharing my complete transcript below. Today, I ask that you take a pledge to fight AIDS. Join me and Keep a Child Alive by taking the pledge.

The women of the world know what to do. And they do it. They would do more if they had equal rights and weren't discriminated against. That is what we need to fix more than anything in our world. With my organization, Keep a Child Alive, we put the trust directly in the people on the ground, who are extremely capable to run these programs but lack the funding, medicines and health care professionals. If we show to the next generation of men and women affected by the AIDS pandemic that we care by providing the necessary resources of universal treatment that doesn't end, doctors and nurses, food programs, micro-loan opportunities -- this will empower them to live their dreams. And stop the pandemic in its tracks. 


We believe that, with AIDS treatment, anything is possible. We watch people become reborn with treatment. And I've seen it myself! At our clinic in Uganda, ALIVE Medical Services, a father came in one day, his name is Bashir, unable to walk and on his deathbed. He had seven children at home. Within one month of ARV therapy and food parcels from our ALIVE clinic -- Bashir looked like a new man and over the past year, his health has restored to a level where he is actually a father again. With the help of a small loan from us, he opened a boda-boda spare parts shop not far from the main road to Jinja. With funds from the shop, he is now able to send all seven of his school-aged children to school. That is empowerment. He can care for his family and contribute to his community because he is healthy. Without effective treatment, his seven girl children would have lost their father and their outcome would have been painful at best.



Even in Rwanda, at our Centreville clinic in Kigali -- women receive AIDS treatment and surrounding care but they have started the Ineza Cooperative as a source of personal empowerment and economic development. Through education programs in design, sewing, management, computer skills and marketing, these patients learn valuable skills to help support themselves. In addition, English classes are taught to enable the women to better communicate with customers and tourists that come to Ineza to purchase goods. Every product that the Ineza women create is one-of-a-kind, and represents the strength and renewal of female survivors of the 1994 genocide. That is empowerment. They find renewed courage and support to heal their once fragmented lives.



I also think we should empower the caretakers themselves to continue the incredible life-changing work they have fearlessly decided to devote their lives to. My dear Mum Carol Dyanti, who founded and runs Ikageng Itireleng in Johannesburg holds a dear place in my heart. She is a mother to over 1,500 children living in child-headed households and provides the basic needs such as food, clothing, transportation, water, electricity, school fees, health care and transport. KCA empowers Mum Carol with funding to be able to provide these needs to relieve some of the pressure and despair faced by these young children, who are forced to take on adult roles. This is empowerment, enabling Mum Carol to continue her work to help raise these children all affected by AIDS.



Empowering women and men affected by the AIDS pandemic will come from OUR investment in them. We need to provide the treatment for life, we need to provide it to everyone, and give them opportunity. We need to believe in them and not give up.



In my capacity as Co-founder and Global Ambassador of Keep a Child Alive I call on all heads of state, governments and leaders in the Global North and the Global South to decide:



Will we end AIDS? Will we end the immense pain and suffering that has been wrought upon millions of people in Africa and beyond by saving millions of lives or not? This discussion has been going on for years but now we have very real evidence that we can stop the disease. If we decide yes we can, we must do everything in our power to keep our promises with a very bold plan for universal access. We must commit to $22 billion by 2015 to prevent 12 million infections and save 7 million beautiful lives. Fifteen million on AIDS treatment by 2015! We CAN create the future.



Now that we know that treatment can stop the disease in its tracks we would be literally getting away with murder if we don't. So I call on the powers that be to:

  • Treat to prevent the spread of HIV toward an AIDS free generation.
  • Treat to prevent millions more children being orphaned.
  • Treat to prevent women and girls from having HIV-positive babies.
  • And finally treat to prevent children dying of AIDS. This must be our moral imperative.

I note that in the global plan being proposed here today that there are no real bold plans to treat and care for children already infected. Treat children or we will be faced with many problems from kids who were not nurtured and not loved as they grow. Only 18 percent of children in need are getting treatment. As Graca Michel says "Every child counts." Even if we decide after this UN meeting that we are going for VICTORY, we will still have to care for 16 million plus AIDS orphans. And that must be our focus too.



I call for us to empower people on the ground to win the battle. Empower people on the ground to win. That is the whole ethos at KCA.

I call for us to put women in charge of the issues that affect them. We are agents of change to a more compassionate world.



I call for us to educate men that women's bodies belong to them. Rape is not allowed, not even if you are married to your rapist.



I call for full gender equality. 


I call for a new world that respects the rights of all people including sex workers.



I call for the end of homophobia. For God's sake, get over it. People are gay. I call for their human rights.



I call for an end to ideals that put profits and patents ahead of people.

I call for a plan to ensure that condoms are available everywhere. Male and female. I call for every effort possible to ensure microbicides are rolled out to protect women.



I call for an end to TB. By rolling out ARVs and screening for TB we can cut TB infections in half. 

I call for progressive language in the final declaration that comes out of the High Level meeting that caters to the world as it is today not medieval concepts we are far beyond. As advances in science and technology soar in our world so must advances in human rights.

We are all a mother's child. Treat her with respect.

I know we can send men to the moon so I know we can do this. I know we can bail out Wall Street in a week so I know we can do this. I know we can stop this disease in its tracks. WE CAN CREATE THE FUTURE.



Thank you.

 
 
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4 hours ago (10:11 PM)
Or, we segregate people with Aids and let them die out comfortabl­y in a Hospice on a nice little tropical island. I'm okay with my tax dollars going to support it. If we can keep rats out of Alberta, we can weed Aids out of the world.
8 hours ago (5:30 PM)
Ms. Keys- your efforts to promote HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment are well documented and laudable. I must challenge you on one topic. Ms. Keys- one need not travel to all corners of the world to fight HIV and AIDS, homophobia and prevention injustice - here in NY (specifica­lly - Hell's Kitchen) is one of the several cities HERE IN THE US that have devastatin­g and pervasive burden of HIV and AIDS--espe­cially among communitie­s of color. You can go to nearly any city with a large African American population and see that the barriers to prevention and treatment waiting lists are similar to the very issues you are addressing across the globe. My point - yes, I have one :-) is that HIV and AIDS is not nor has it ever been an "or" epidemic. Domestic or global - high risk heterosexu­al or gay - Black gay men or white gay men. In truth, it always has been an "and" epidemic (exchange all of the prior "or' for "and"). Countless numbers of young people are in dire need of people like you who are willing to stand up and say - HIV is real and we can defeat it but we must break the silence-fi­ght stigma and learn our HIV status as how to protect ourselves and others from this virus. So let me ask you -- will you fight to "Keep A Child Alive" here in the US?
9 hours ago (4:59 PM)
I am invested in a company that is trying to cure AIDS for over 6 years now and to think that after a decade of inventing, testing etc., spending millions to bring a viable product to market, that they shouldn't benefit financiall­y from that is ridiculous­. If you take that out, why would anyone go through the pain it takes to get something approved?
11 hours ago (3:07 PM)
The Netherland­s has had the rep of being drug capital of Europe but I understand from Wikipedia that the legal use of grass is being rethought, gotten out of hand.

It seems they will continue to support legal use of heroin that includes the distributi­on of clean needles. That seems a good idea, no?
14 hours ago (11:27 AM)
Give every 3rd world woman a Glock and train them to use it to kill any male who tries to rape them. That would solve a lot more problems than just HIV transmissi­on too. Women need something to actually DEFEND themselves and guns are the only real means to afford women equality in places where laws do virtually nothing to do so.
15 hours ago (10:26 AM)
@tkns

I don't believe that at all. Every study I've seen says that most of the people who have AIDS are homosexual­. Either way, I don't care. I consider myself a pretty average person and I know how to not get AIDs are therefore everybody else should also. Obviously, there is a lot of rape going on in Africa, that is a leadership problem. Sadly, almost all liberals do not want to particpate in any wars and so nothing will be done. The solution is to disband the United Stations and create a new global program that does not include countries like Syria and Iran. If there was a global army, we could change Africa.
12 hours ago (1:51 PM)
My sister died of AIDS which she contracted from her cheating, unknown to her, bi-sexual husband. She knew how to not get the disease and felt immune to it given her presumed monogamous marriage. Think about what you say Doc. Jeez.
11 hours ago (2:40 PM)
Name the so called "studies" you have read. I wouldn't want to believe you're spreading untruths.
22 hours ago (3:47 AM)
Sorry Alicia not interested but good luck with your project, I give to domestic charities and do not believe our USA government should give anything for any cause while operating a budget deficit.
01:07 AM on 6/10/2011
In many Asian countries, staight/he­terosexual folks bear the brunt of the disease. Many people are illiterate and never heard of it. Many times, migrant workers, who may be away from their families for months or even years may pay for intimacy and then bring the disease back home. Luckily they are not hobbled by the religious folks like here and prevention­/help efforts have been working on educating people and help preventing the spread of the disease.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
GOD, is a benevolent dictator.
10:38 PM on 6/09/2011
HIV can only be stopped, if people would just change their behavior.
15 hours ago (10:46 AM)
In the meantime, what do we do about all the sick people?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rory Canfield
14 hours ago (11:58 AM)
Faced with an incurable disease, make them comfortabl­e as possible in a hospice and let them go. Pouring untold BILLIONS into a cure for a disease which could be avoided by not participat­ing in certain behaviors is foolish when the monies could go to areas in which real success could be had. AIDS research is an ongoing scam promoted falsely.
12 hours ago (2:01 PM)
read my post above.
07:59 PM on 6/09/2011
How is it that, with ALL of the scientific advances (mostly in spying on and killing people) has it not been possible to CURE any harmful disease since the early 1950s?
01:40 AM on 6/10/2011
Like my good friend Chris Rock says, "The money's in the medicine." There's no money in the cure. Funny how at one point contractin­g HIV was considered a death sentence. But if you can AFFORD it, you can take a combinatio­n of drugs that will prolong your life indefinite­ly. Everything surroundin­g medicine is BIG BUSINESS. Multi-tril­lion dollar business. You and I may never see another cure again...
14 hours ago (11:48 AM)
So true MrTJB. A lot of people overlook the money factor. Unfortunat­ely I don't have the link but read that HIV/AIDS treatment starts at 30k a year, thats a years salary for most. It's also quite sad that it took the US 20yrs to approve a vaccine for all that DOES prevent the spread of AIDS/HIV..­.their excuse: they didn't have money to afford the masses(poo­r-blue collar) the vaccine, only those (wealthy) who could afford it.
23 hours ago (3:19 AM)
Many diseases have been "cured" through vaccinatio­n; you are not aware of them because they have been banished from our daily experience­s. The ones that are left are simply harder to crack. Anyway, with the human population on this planet growing by leaps and bounds, it's hard to make a point that disease is a serious problem for humanity. We can all thank modern, Western medicine for that.
06:03 PM on 6/09/2011
Murder and genocide are committed every day by Pharmaceut­ical companies and the Government­s of the World. There are cures to many diseases and if not cures at least better treatments that are withheld from the impoverish­ed and sick. Every Day.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eddie Sengole
05:08 PM on 6/09/2011
Alicia,

I am excited to read you here. Please help also spread the word about creating the cure based on genetic mutation CCR5-delta 32- of the CCR5-delta 32+ which confers immunity to AIDS

This gene variant CCR5-delta 32- carried by 10% or more of the whites living in the northern countries is the cure for AIDS and one guy who lives here in San Francisco was cured of AIDs.

Read more here:

Toward an H.I.V. Cure
http://www­.nytimes.c­om/2011/06­/04/opinio­n/04iht-ed­sinoussi04­.html
04:51 PM on 6/09/2011
Alicia in reference AID's read the book by Edward T. Haslam - you'll learn about a scientist Doctor Mary Sherman and her experiment­s in relation to the AID's virus.
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daveny
04:29 PM on 6/09/2011
ARV is only part of the solution -- it does not "stop" HIV, nor eliminate it, cure it, or treat it without long-term adverse consequenc­es.

What it DOES do is, as this post discusses, give people with HIV a chance to live much longer and healthier lives than otherwise imaginable­.

It reduces the incidence of transmissi­on, but does not eliminate transmissi­on. It also raises the possibilit­y of simply having to constantly develop new ARV cocktails to combat drug resistance­. Only coupled with prevention can we bring HIV fully under control.