Friday, December 4, 2009

Red Alarm In Copenhagen



By Jens Galschiot,Copenhagen
Thousands of red LED lamps will mark a 7-meters water rising during the COP15 climate summit. The art happening Sevenmeters.net is a visualisation by Jens Galschiot, about how Copenhagen will look like, when all the ice of Greenland has melted away.
Galschiot and his volunteers, armed with long ladders, will this Saturday and Sunday hang up the LED lamps. They will start by the three big 'refugees' on Vejlands Allé / Ørestads Boulevard by the Bella Center. The 2,000 LED lamps are specially made in the artist’s workshop of bicycle lamps, which are soldered and glued together with extra batteries, so the will be able to blink constantly during the meeting.
The artist, who is well-known for his poignant - yet audience-friendly, art manife¬sta¬tions, got the permission to put up all of the blinking lights in a 7 meter line above daily water, around the lakes and in the whole channel area in the center of Copenhagen, and along the roads to the Bella Center. Galschiot hopes that the red blinking LED-lights will be some sort of an international grassroots’ symbol of the climate catastrophe.
With the happening Galschiot will visualise, that when the water rises and drought expands, there will be many places where people no longer will be able to stay. For example the isle of Amager, where the Climate Summit is held, will be 5 meters under water, if Greenland’s ice melts. If the ice of Antarctica also melts, the water will rise another 75 meters, so the peaks of the mountains will be in great demand, and there are not plenty of them in Denmark.
”With this manifestation I will highlight the climate crisis, and the fact, that it is not only a problem for the polar bears and the nature. The global warming may be a catastrophe for humanity. UN says that over 200 million refugees will be a reality in the next 40 years.
The refugees will trigger a giant demographic crisis, with risks of closing the national borders and beginning an ‘all against all fight, to protect our territory against the refugees, which our own CO2 leak has created. A frightening scenario that will put our humanistic and democratic civilisation under intense pressure, so that war and rise of totalitarian systems might be the consequence. This is the legacy that we will leave to our children!” Galschiot says.
At the venue of the climate summit there will also be red blinking LED lamps. Small badges will be given to the delegates, so they can use them as a silent indicator about how seriously they take the climate crisis.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

WORLD AIDS DAY 2009


Courage and leadership must continue in the AIDS response, urges Alliance Executive Director, Alvaro Bermejo. Writing from Cambodia, Alvaro says the benefits of committed partnerships are clear to see this World AIDS Day, a sign which he believes should inspire stakeholders to recommit to fighting the spread and the impact of HIV.I write this from Cambodia, a country that in spite of ranking 137 in the Human Development Index has already achieved its Millennium Development Goal target of halving HIV prevalence. This is a country that despite a weak health infrastructure has managed to provide antiretroviral treatment to over 90% of those who need it.
The secret of this success? It’s been done through the strongest partnership I’ve come across in my travels for the Alliance. A coalition of affected communities, expert patients, health professionals, NGOs, government, donors and researchers who have come together to fight the epidemic.
Unprecedented partnerships have been formed all over the world in our efforts to tackle HIV and it is paying off. The latest data shows new HIV infections are down by 17% with the greatest progress made in the hardest hit region of sub-Saharan Africa. HIV prevention programmes are making a difference and thanks to the availability of treatment more people are living longer and AIDS-related deaths are down.
But the global economic crisis and conflicting priorities are putting these partnerships and this progress at risk. Funding for HIV prevention is still the smallest proportion of national AIDS budgets and many programmes are not targeting those most in need or most at risk. There are also worrying signs in some countries that governments might be about to put in place legal frameworks that further institutionalize discrimination against groups most at risk. Discrimination against sex workers, drug users and men who have sex with men violates human rights, fuels the epidemic, and undermines cost-effective interventions.
The economic crisis might provide the incentive for a scenario of increased solidarity to emerge. One in which NGOs focus on developing more efficient and sustainable responses, work with committed political leaders to create policy space for focused prevention interventions and introduce legal frameworks that reduce long-term vulnerability; a scenario where donors and the international community find creative ways to close the financial gap that countries are facing and resource health systems, through innovative financing, such as introducing a currency transaction levy or other forms of financial taxes.
But the other extreme scenario isn’t appealing. It is one in which donors and political elites reduce their financial commitments, are unwilling to take the difficult decisions that efficient, focused HIV prevention requires, and row back on commitments to universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support; a scenario in which NGOs take to confrontation and people living with HIV abandon their active involvement and solidarity that has been crucial to our response to HIV.
What is in no doubt, is we are going to have a ‘new’ response emerging from the economic crisis. Whether it is a creative one that builds on increased solidarity or a destructive one that weakens these partnerships depends on the leadership each one of us shows.
World AIDS Day is a good opportunity to remind us to continue to show dynamic, innovative and courageous leadership. The fantastic integration between healthcare services with NGOs and faith-based organisations running home and community care programmes that I see here in Cambodia and elsewhere around the world can inspire the vision we all need.
Let’s make this World AIDS Day an opportunity to recommit ourselves to continue to fight the spread and impact of HIV, and to hold governments to account for any failure to protect their citizens’ human rights.
Alvaro Bermejo, Executive Director:
"What is in no doubt, is we are going to have a ‘new’ response emerging from the economic crisis".

In Another News, The Population Council Has Advanced Access to Services for Populations Most Vulnerable to HIV.
Men who have sex with men (MSM) remain extremely vulnerable to HIV and AIDS, particularly in the many developing countries where their sexual behavior is criminalized. Harmful policies, a lack of targeted health information, and widespread stigma and discrimination--even at the hands of health providers--continue to stand in the way of the goal of universal access to HIV-related services.

The Population Council is committed to reducing HIV infection and transmission among MSM by increasing access to prevention, treatment and care services through our innovative research strategies and program approaches. Council researchers identify and describe the risk behaviors of this often hard-to-reach population, test interventions for expanding access to HIV-related services, and raise awareness among governments and program planners through high profile meetings and dissemination efforts. Our research is getting attention, and, most importantly, it is making an impact.

In recognition of World AIDS Day, we invite you to view a slide show, which highlights the important work we are doing with MSM in Nigeria. You will also find the moving personal stories of Patrick, Samuel, and Adeolu, just a few examples of young men whose lives we have changed.

These are just a few examples of how the Council is contributing to the worldwide effort to foster universal access to HIV services as a basic human right, with a special focus on vulnerable populations. We encourage you to read more about our work on our website.