UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa

 Elizabeth Mataka, United Nations Secretary General's Special Envoy for AIDS in Africa:

“We are no longer fatalistic about HIV and AIDS. There is hope.”

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Feedback Topics

Streamline your Efforts for each Country

well done Madam for this effort, will it not be better to streamline your efforts/energy country by country, find out their peculiar challenges than carrying the entire continent?

Thanks, Chuks Nigeria

Male Circumcision

The UN, through WHO and UNAIDS, supports male circumcision as an addition to HIV prevention. Although there are studies done outside Africa that do not seem to show any preventive effect, the over-whelming evidence seems to suggest that it works. So for this purpose I am comfortable with the findings that cutting off the foreskin does reduce the chances of MEN getting infected. And this is where my problem is. MEN.

It seems to me, Madam, that almost all responses to prevent the further spread of the virus is aimed at men. Take condoms for example, here in Zambia and many parts of the world, one is likely to find the male condom than the female ones. And if one does find a female condom, it is neither affordable nor free. Even messages about sticking to one partner are, in our setting, aimed at men as it is assumed that they are the ones who are likely to have multiple partners. And yet the limited studies done on discordant couples show that there are more women who are positive in that situation than men.

Thank you for this Website

Thank you very much for providing us with this great opportunity of interacting with you on your website. It also gives us an opportunity to see the work that you are doing as the UN Special envoy for HIV and AIDS in Africa. It also gives us an opportunity to dialogue on the focus areas you have chosen.  Lucia Mvula

My View from Nigeria

It is with great pleasure that i write, honestly to commend this wonderful gesture of yours. My name is Dosunmu Olabisi Oluwaseun, a young Nigerian who has been privately involved in the campaign against the spread of HIV/AIDS. One thing i've been able to discover about this subject matter is that there's still much to do about information and education of people, especially the youth on this scourge. Many would think they have enough knowledge about it but they know little or nothing. Some even believe it's a curse. However, it will be very appropriate if more hands can be employed or sponsored to tackle this challenge. Thanks for noting this.

Poverty the main culprit in Africa

Thank you very much for this website and i hope our contributions will be honoured. I have worked on HIV/AIDS projects for more than ten years i think we should focus more on the preventation side than treatment inorder to achieve our objectives. Many people are indulging in unsafe sexual behaviour because of poverty according to my assessment poverty is the key issue driving people to have mainly unprotected sex because they want to earn a living. As UN can you support projects aiming at eradicating poverty and a follow up should be done to ensure that projects are practically implemented instead of basing them on reports. There is very minimal support on psychosocial programmes for orphans and vulnerable children.

Will this website be used by PLWHIV in Zambia? - I think NOT.

I think you are going to have to do quite a bit in making this website far much more simplified, if at all you are going to get much out of the Zambian persons living with HIV and the general public as whole. For people like me that have been privileged to have walked the corridors of tertiary education, it is easy to follow. But I doubt that that is the same for the ordinary Zambians, among other ordinary nationals across the continent, whose interests Madam Mataka serves.

Women need to become more Bold

 Thank you very much for encouraging us to talk freely Violence Against Women, and I can say easily the Violence Against Women doesn't need so much definition, it is what we always do.

On Violence Against Women

Reading Elizabeth’s, comments on the eve of International Day Against Violence Against women, I could not help but to chuckle and agree with those comments! Having worked as an activist against gender based violence for almost twenty years with the YWCA, in Zambia, I used to take note of the subtle ways in which some highly placed individuals in institutions that could help end or reduce gender based violence could look at you and make such comments like, "are you sure there was no consent in body language by your client?