Aids is now 'a black disease', US delegation tells summit

US: It is time for the US African-American community "to face the fact that Aids has become a black disease" and find ways to…

US: It is time for the US African-American community "to face the fact that Aids has become a black disease" and find ways to defeat it, the chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP) told the international Aids summit in Toronto, Canada yesterday.

Julian Bond, the Rev Jesse Jackson and other powerful African-American leaders called on their own community to accept responsibility for ending the devastation of Aids, which has claimed more than 200,000 black Americans since the epidemic began 25 years ago.

In a first for the political leaders, they blamed the disaster on a lack of will and pledged to do more.

"The story of Aids in America is mostly one of a failure to lead and nowhere is this truer than in our black communities," said Mr Bond, chairman of the NAACP.

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"We have led successful responses to many other challenges in the past. Now is the time for us to face the fact that Aids has become a black disease."

According to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, African-Americans account for half of all new cases of HIV, the virus that causes Aids. It is the leading cause of death for black women between the ages of 25 to 34. Overall, blacks are seven times more likely to die from Aids than other at-risk groups.

"Because of poverty, ignorance and prejudice, Aids has been allowed to stalk and kill black America like a serial killer," said Rev Jackson, chairman of Rainbow Push Coalition. Rev Jackson didn't make it to the conference, but issued a statement of support with the other leaders.

"But we have also been a compliant victim, submitting through inaction," Rev Jackson said. "It is now time for us to fight Aids like the major civil rights issue it is."

The US black delegation pledged to draft a five-year plan to reduce HIV rates among African-Americans and to boost the percentage of those who get tests and learn their HIV status.

The 16th annual Aids summit has drawn more than 24,000 researchers, activists and health workers from 132 countries this year, which marks the 25th anniversary of the first reported cases of HIV. Since then, Aids has killed more than 25 million people globally.