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Sunday,
when the AIDS awareness symbol-a red ribbon-was unveiled at the Olympic
Bird's Nest stadium in Beijing, Chinese
health authorities, along with the United Nations AIDS agency made a promise to
fight discrimination against people suffering from the condition.
The decision comes after many years during which the Chinese
government has shrouded in silence the fact that AIDS was actually a major
issue which many were facing and that fear of discrimination at the work place prevented
people from getting tested for HIV infection.
Also on Sunday, state television showed viewers Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao during his visit in a village in eastern China's Anhui
province, an area severely affected by the disease, where Wen spoke to patients
at their bedside and children whose parents had died from AIDS.
In order to mark World AIDS Day, held on December 1, a 66-foot by 50-foot banner featuring
the red ribbon was unveiled at the Bird's Nest stadium, where country
coordinator of UNAIDS in China Dr. Bernhard Schwartlander delivered a speech.
The latter revealed that a large number of Chinese people who ran the risk of
getting AIDS refused to undergo HIV tests and thus denied themselves treatment,
because they were afraid of coming to be discriminated against.
According to official estimates released by UNAIDS, there
are currently 700,000 people with HIV in China, of which 85,000 suffer from
AIDS. Nevertheless, the number of cases that Chinese officials have reported is
a mere 264,302, due to the fact that many have not been tested yet.
In 2007, the worldwide death toll that AIDS claimed amounted
to 2.1 million people.
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