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Mbeki blamed for 330,000 deaths | Mbeki blamed for 330,000 deaths |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A prominent South African Aids activist has told the BBC former President Thabo Mbeki should be called to account for his decision to block HIV medication. | |
A recent Harvard School of Public Health study said 330,000 deaths were caused by his 1999 decision to declare available drugs toxic and dangerous. | |
Zackie Achmat said Mr Mbeki had ignored the scientific evidence. | |
Mr Mbeki's spokesman referred media enquiries to the government, but no spokesman was available to comment. | Mr Mbeki's spokesman referred media enquiries to the government, but no spokesman was available to comment. |
Mr Achmat, who leads the Treatment Action Campaign, which successfully lobbied for the eventual reversal of government policy, claimed Mr Mbeki had "blood on his hands". | |
He called for him to be summoned to a judicial inquiry or the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. | |
'Major obstacle' | |
The study, published on 20 October, said that as a result of Mr Mbeki's policies, nearly 35,000 babies were also born HIV-positive between 2000 and 2005. | |
The former president had failed to roll out the drugs which could have prevented mother-to-child transmission, said the researchers. | The former president had failed to roll out the drugs which could have prevented mother-to-child transmission, said the researchers. |
The study, led by Dr Pride Chigwedere, accused the South African government of "acting as a major obstacle in the provision of medication to patients with Aids". | The study, led by Dr Pride Chigwedere, accused the South African government of "acting as a major obstacle in the provision of medication to patients with Aids". |
The authors said that under the leadership of Mr Mbeki, the government had restricted use of donated anti-retroviral drugs and blocked funds for more than a year from the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria. | The authors said that under the leadership of Mr Mbeki, the government had restricted use of donated anti-retroviral drugs and blocked funds for more than a year from the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria. |
To estimate the benefits they say were lost to South Africans because of the failure to provide appropriate drugs between 2000 and 2005, the researchers looked at a number of factors. | To estimate the benefits they say were lost to South Africans because of the failure to provide appropriate drugs between 2000 and 2005, the researchers looked at a number of factors. |
These included: | These included: |
• the number of patients who died without receiving treatment | • the number of patients who died without receiving treatment |
• the relative cost of the drugs and the resources available | • the relative cost of the drugs and the resources available |
• comparative treatment programmes in Namibia and Botswana. | |
Since the former president was replaced in September 2008 a new health minister, Barbara Hogan, has been appointed and she has been praised by Aids campaigners for tackling the HIV issue with determination. | |