Thursday, December 02, 2004

World AIDS Day - December 1, 2004

The Sunday edition of the New York Times had a very poignant, sad, revealing piece with regard to the immensity of the scourge HIV has become in Southern Africa. The piece is entitled: "AIDS Steals Life in a Southern African Town." Unfortunately, the link to the specific article doesn't work. It reads, in part:

It has the appearance of a biblical cataclysm, a thousand-year flood of misery and death. In fact, it is all too ordinary. Tiny Lavumisa, population 2,000, is the template for a demographic plunge taking place in every corner of southern Africa.

Across the region, AIDS has reduced life expectancy to levels not seen since the 1800's. In six sub-Saharan nations, the United Nations estimates, the average child born today will not live to 40.

Here in Swaziland, a kingdom about the size of New Jersey with one million people tucked into South Africa's northeast corner, two in five adults are infected with H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS. Life expectancy now averages 34.4 years, the fourth lowest on earth. Fifteen years ago, it stood at 55. By 2010, experts predict, it will be 30.


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