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Subject: [AfricaMatters] AIDS in Africa: an indictment of an outmoded
    social order

 WSWS : News & Analysis : Medicine & Health : HIV / AIDS

AIDS in Africa: an indictment of an outmoded social order
By Fred Mazelis
16 August 2000

The 13th International Conference on AIDS, held in Durban, South Africa last 
month, highlighted the social catastrophe unfolding on the African continent. 
The meeting took place in the country with the largest number of people 
infected by HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, on the continent that is home to 
70 percent of the world's HIV-infected population.

Of the estimated 35 million around the world who are living with HIV/AIDS, 25 
million come from the sub-Saharan region. While this area contains about 10 
percent of the world's population, 80 percent of the 2.8 million who died of 
AIDS last year come from the sub-Saharan countries.

Seven countries in the region have HIV infection rates of greater than 20 
percent. In most of these areas, according to the United Nations agency 
Unaids, one-third of today's 15-year-olds will die of the disease. At the 
present rate, 10 years from now life expectancy is predicted to be between 30 
and 35 years of age in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, roughly 
half what it would be without AIDS.

Many other countries in the region will also be devastated. An entire 
generation will be decimated by the epidemic.

In terms of the deadliness and persistence of this disease, the only 
comparison is the Black Plague, which killed 100 million or more in the 
fourteenth and seventeenth centuries. Twenty-five million died in little more 
than a year in the 1918 influenza pandemic, but, unlike HIV, that killer 
virus vanished within 18 months.

Medicine has made enormous strides in the past century, especially in dealing 
with infectious disease. Despite the progress made in understanding as well 
as in treatment of AIDS in the 20 years since it first emerged, however, it 
killed nearly 3 million last year, and the vast majority of the world's 
people remain at its mercy.

This trajectory of the AIDS epidemic has been visible for some time. At the 
1998 meeting the scale of the human tragedy was very clear. The epidemic has 
been worsening in Africa and elsewhere, even as new treatments have 
drastically reduced the death rates in Europe and North America.

The response from the world's major economic powers and the giant 
pharmaceutical companies has been either silence or platitudes. Last year the 
imperialist creditors of the Third World promised to forgive $100 billion in 
debt. Even this gesture, amounting to a tiny fraction of the trillions owed 
to international institutions and banks, has come with conditions attached 
and has barely begun to be implemented.

In the context of the latest international conference, more attention has 
been focused on the crisis in Africa than ever before. The connection between 
AIDS and the growing social inequality of the past two decades is also being 
grasped by greater numbers of people, and it has become increasingly 
difficult for the ruling elites in Washington, New York, London and other 
major capitals to ignore.

The major powers might wish to quarantine Africa, to let it succumb to its 
fate, but the spread of HIV has made this impossible. AIDS is spreading even 
more rapidly in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union than in Africa. In 
China the number of HIV-infected grew by an estimated 60 percent last year, 
and there are now 600,000 mainland Chinese who carry the virus. India, the 
world's second most populous nation, is also on the brink of mass infection. 
If these countries were to face a rate of infection such as that existing in 
South Africa, it could lead to hundreds of millions of people condemned to an 
early death.

Furthermore, with the growth of economic globalization, travel, migration and 
tourism, the spread of HIV threatens to spill over, or more precisely to 
attack again, in the wealthier countries, including those which have made 
strides in reducing both deaths and infection over the past decade. Even more 
important, as far as Western capitalist interests are concerned, is the 
threat of social and political explosions in huge areas of the world. These 
would have, in legal language, a “material adverse effect” on capitalist 
investment and trade.

The imperialist policymakers are motivated above all by questions of their 
own security. The US Central Intelligence Agency summed up its concerns in a 
special report issued last January, “These (infectious) diseases will 
endanger US citizens at home and abroad, threaten US armed forces deployed 
overseas, and exacerbate social and political instability in key countries 
and regions in which the United States has significant interests.”

These considerations are behind a flurry of new initiatives over the past few 
months. Last May five giant pharmaceutical firms from the US, Britain and 
Germany offered to discuss voluntary cuts of as much as 80 percent in the 
prices of anti-retroviral drugs used in the treatment of AIDS. One company, 
Glaxo Wellcome, proposed to cut the cost of one of its drugs from $16 a pill 
to $2. And right after the conclusion of the AIDS conference in July, the US 
Export-Import Bank, a government agency financed by Congress, announced that 
it was prepared to offer sub-Saharan nations $1 billion in annual loans to 
finance the purchase of AIDS drugs and medical services.

The public relations objective behind the US announcement was bluntly 
revealed by James Harmon, the president of the Export-Import Bank, who 
piously declared that “this is at least a first step in showing the world 
that Africa is important to the United States and that we can make a dent in 
this terrible problem.”

The US proposal is a fraud. First of all, the millions of afflicted cannot 
afford even a $2 pill daily, under conditions in many of them exist on less 
than the equivalent of $2 a day.

Nor is it simply a matter of the distribution of drugs, although that is 
certainly needed. These countries require means of providing modern medical 
care to the tens of millions who need it. The HIV-infected would need to be 
tested to determine the efficacy of their treatment. Side effects would have 
to be monitored and treated as well. A whole medical and social 
infrastructure would have to be built up where it barely existed even before 
being overwhelmed by the AIDS epidemic.

The loan proposal is cynically aimed, not so much at meeting the needs of 
those facing death from AIDS, but at protecting the profits of the US drug 
companies. A condition for receiving the $1 billion in loans being offered by 
Washington would be that the money be spent on drugs and services from US 
firms. So huge are the profit margins on the anti-retroviral drugs that even 
at the lower prices these pharmaceutical giants will still make a profit. The 
US proposal will also protect the patents of these huge corporations, 
preventing the African nations from purchasing generic versions elsewhere.

Moreover, under conditions in which the interest on external debt paid 
annually by these countries is already about four times what they spend on 
health or education, the proposal that they take on billions more in debt, at 
interest rates of about 7 percent, is a cruel mockery of the needs of the 
hundreds of millions of desperately impoverished people in sub-Saharan Africa.

If none of the proposals from Washington, the United Nations or other 
capitals even begin to address themselves to the enormity of the AIDS 
challenge, it is not simply because of the intentions of individuals or the 
greed of individual corporations and their CEOs. The pharmaceutical firms are 
part of a system of production for profit in which they either deliver 
maximum return to their shareholders or they see their competitive position 
undermined and their stock prices collapse. There is a direct conflict 
between the profit system itself and the most basic human needs, in this case 
the need for medical treatment to save millions of lives.

Precisely because none of the governments, companies or international 
institutions can address this, their spokesmen are engaged in a jockeying for 
position. Some of the mutual finger-pointing that took place at the AIDS 
conference had the effect of diverting attention from the real issues.

There was understandable consternation and outrage at South African President 
Thabo Mbeki's refusal to acknowledge HIV as the cause of AIDS. Mbeki's 
purpose, in falsely counterposing the importance of poverty as a factor in 
the spread of illness to the role of HIV itself, was to deflect attention 
from the bankruptcy of his own government, and that of Nelson Mandela 
preceding him, in dealing with the crisis.

The end of apartheid less than 10 years ago, followed by the election of 
Mandela to the presidency, was used to create the myth of a peaceful solution 
to the struggle of black South Africans. In fact nothing was changed 
fundamentally as far as the poverty and social misery facing the great 
majority of the South African people is concerned. Political power was 
transferred, not to the masses, but to a black elite sharing power with and 
being incorporated into the South African ruling capitalist class.

Mbeki, along with every other national bourgeois leader in sub-Saharan 
Africa, is incapable of mounting any challenge to the domination of the giant 
multinationals around the globe. He is desperate to cover up his own 
bankruptcy and complicity in the disaster now befalling the country. Hence 
his use of nationalist demagogy, calling for “an African solution to an 
African problem.”

Scientists and health workers were justifiably angered by Mbeki's speech in 
Durban. But the official of the World Bank, who accused the South African 
leadership of “irresponsibility that borders on criminality,” was guilty of 
monstrous hypocrisy as he sought to use Mbeki to divert attention from the 
role of the banks and multinationals.

The crisis in South Africa and throughout the region is the clearest 
expression of the reality of global capitalism as it enters the twenty-first 
century. It is no coincidence that the spread of AIDS has coincided with the 
“structural adjustment” programs through which the International Monetary 
Fund and the World Bank have saddled dozens of countries with trillions of 
dollars in debt. Poverty and malnutrition have skyrocketed. Reductions in 
spending for education and health care have left masses of people ignorant of 
basic health issues, unable to receive treatment for other diseases which 
have been shown to increase their susceptibility to HIV infection.

The growth of poverty has led to the internal migration of many millions of 
men seeking work. The breakdown in family structure has led to the spread of 
sexually-transmitted diseases, above all AIDS, among women forced into 
prostitution and men seeking sex far from home. Superstition and cultural 
backwardness, including the myth that a man can be cured of HIV infection 
through sex with a virgin, has been encouraged and has led to further spread 
of the disease.

What is needed to conduct the fight against AIDS is no great mystery. Tens of 
billions of dollars would be required to bring the latest medical treatment 
to the millions who need it, along with a massive health education program 
and the provision of decent medical care and preventive medicine. A 
coordinated international campaign could save millions of lives over the next 
decade, along with sharply reducing the rate of infection.

At the same time, a commitment is needed to provide all the resources 
necessary to secure a vaccine against HIV in the shortest possible time. The 
search for a vaccine has been hampered by scientific obstacles having to do 
with the complex ability of HIV to mutate, but also because profit-making 
medicine is oriented far more toward the lucrative drug medications.

It should be clear that there is no purely national solution to the AIDS 
crisis. The comments by such figures as Nelson Mandela and Peter Piot, the 
chief of the Unaids agency, calling for a “nationally driven” campaign 
against HIV/AIDS are a clear signal that they will do nothing to expose the 
responsibility of global capitalism and to demand a global struggle against 
the disease.

The magnitude of the challenge calls for the nationalization of the drug 
companies and the health care industry. The giant corporations, which have 
the power of life or death over billions of people, must be transformed into 
public institutions under the democratic control of the all working people. 
The supremacy of the capitalist market must be rejected in favor of a 
systematic plan, which harnesses all of humanity's resources in this campaign.

When the Black Plague struck, the world was not equipped to fight back. 
Today, when the weapons are at hand to fight the new plague, capitalism 
prevents their utilization.

There is only one force in the world which can lead this struggle on behalf 
of all humanity. The international working class has no stake in the profit 
system. It must fight for the reorganization of economic life to meet the 
needs of all. The struggle against AIDS has come to symbolize the struggle 
against the outmoded social relations of capitalism, which is leading to 
social devastation of literally genocidal proportions
 

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