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By Elizabeth Piper, Reuters
Friday, Kyiv, Ukraine February 13, 2004
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KIEV (Reuters) - Ukraine appealed to Western groups on Friday to boost
assistance to the impoverished country's fight against Europe's fastest
growing AIDS epidemic after a leading group halted financing over poor
management.
Ukraine, under scrutiny in the West as three of its neighbors join the
European Union in May, has seen the number of AIDS case rise quickly since
independence in 1991.
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With about 62,000 HIV cases registered, experts fear the real figure in the
country of 48 million could reach about 400,000, or about one percent of the
adult population. Some 3,500 people have died of AIDS, the health ministry
said.
Many voluntary and non-government groups have joined the fight, but fears
among health professionals were raised when late last month the Global Fund
to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria suspended payments due to
mismanagement.
Olha Lapushenko, first deputy minister for health and Ukraine's chief public
health officer, acknowledged the ministry might have done too little to
persuade the Global Fund to stay. But her concern was for those now going
without medicine.
"Today we need medicine for these 2,100 people, but now we cannot start
treating them. And this worries me as a doctor," she told a news conference,
speaking about 2,000 adults and 100 infected children who had been earmarked
for medical treatment.
"The position of this country is that... we are not ready to go into
unending talks. What Ukraine needs now is a definite decision... we can say
that we will be open in our relations to all international organizations
which want to work with us."
The Global Fund, is an independent group which seeks to be the main conduit
for aid from rich to poor countries to combat disease, financing 225 disease
prevention and treatment programs in 121 countries.
It suspended payments to Ukraine saying it was concerned with the slow
progress of the programs it supported. Ukraine, it said, was lagging
"substantially" behind its targets.
The fund had approved three grants worth a total of $25 million over two
years to Ukraine, with $7.5 million already disbursed. Ukraine has spent
only $740,000 so far, it said.
Health officials said they had agreed with the government to return unused
money to the fund. Efforts would be concentrated on pressing on with
programs to boost the number of people on therapy with anti-AIDS drugs
using available state funds.
"We decided to return the money given to Ukraine by the Global Fund... and
the cabinet's reserve fund will pay instead for the medicines for 2,000
adults and 100 children," Lapushenko said. "We are interested not in money,
but in medicine."
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