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President George W. Bush was honoured on
the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day for his commitment in AIDS fight and
received the “International Medal of PEACE” given by Dr. Rick Warren on behalf
of the Global PEACE Coalition during the Saddleback Civil Forum on Global
Health. The president received the award and said that he “insisted on
measurable goals” because he “felt lives needed to be saved.”
“No man in history – no world leader – has
ever done more for global health than President George W. Bush, and I think we
need to recognize that,” said Pastor Warren during the ceremony.
His President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR) had reached its goal to support treatment for 2 million people
ahead of schedule. The plan has provided antiretroviral drugs to over 2.1
million people, most of them in Africa, where
only 50,000 were getting the treatment before 2003.
Bush reaffirmed the government’s commitment
to fight against HIV/AIDS as the world marked the 20th AIDS Day.
In a message posted on his official Web
site, Obama pledged to developing a comprehensive National HIV/AIDS Strategy to
reduce HIV infection, increase access to treatment and care and reduce
HIV/AIDS-related health disparities. He promised that his administration will
continue the “critical work” to address the AIDS crisis around the world.
President-elect Barack Obama congratulated
President Bush for his accomplishments with HIV/AIDS and said that “all of us
must do our part...and we must reaffirm our own commitment to confront and
defeat this disease once and for all.” Obama admits that more efforts need to
be done to confront the epidemic of HIV communities of color, especially
amongst gay men and other men who have sex with men and calls for action to put
an end to this problem.
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