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Campaigns promoting AIDS prevention in China
www.chinaview.cn 2006-11-30 21:04:26



Taxi drivers join Beijing's fight against AIDS

    BEIJING, Nov. 30 (Xinhua) -- Five thousand taxi drivers will contribute to Beijing's fight against HIV/AIDS by raising awareness among passengers, a health official said here on Thursday.

    Drivers from 15 taxi companies will dish out HIV/AIDS info cards to passengers in the first ten days of December, said Beijing Health Bureau director Jin Dapeng at a ceremony marking World AIDS Day that falls on Friday.

    The move is aimed at helping Beijingers know more about AIDS and to persuade them to treat people living with HIV/AIDS in a humane manner.

    Beijing has reported 633 new HIV cases so far this year, including 130 local residents, 491 migrant workers and 12 foreigners, said Jin. With the 679 new HIV cases recorded in 2005,the capital now has a total of 3,462 cases.

    High-risk groups include sex workers and drug addicts.

    Jin said Beijing has set up six specialized clinics in six city districts to provide HIV carriers with medicine and treatment.

    According to the Ministry of Health, China had an estimated 650,000 HIV carriers, including 75,000 AIDS patients, by the end of last year.

China to air foreign documentary to mark World AIDS Day

    BEIJING, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- China is going to air a foreign documentary on HIV/AIDS to mark the World AIDS Day which falls on Friday, according to the Ministry of Health.

    The documentary, called "A Closer Walk", features international AIDS experts, social activists and AIDS patients who served in AIDS organizations.

    It has been widely aired in the Africa, Europe, the United States, Canada, India and Ukraine, said Vice Health Minister Wang Longde at a preview at Beijing's Great Hall of the People on Wednesday.

    Mostly based on the original version, the documentary to be broadcast by China Central Television (CCTV) has an additional 10 minutes focusing on China's prevention and control of AIDS.

    Chinese officials are interviewed on "sensitive" topics regarding AIDS, and it depicts the lives of orphans of AIDS victims and HIV-infected people, said director Li Man.

    The government had taken many measures and made achievements in AIDS control, said Kevin Wale, president of General Motors China Group, which sponsored the making of the documentary.

    Wang Longde said China would continue improving laws and regulations and increase input in AIDS control, while encouraging social contributions.

    The health ministry reported last week that the number of people officially reported as HIV infected had risen 27.5 percent since the beginning of the year, to more than 180,000.

    It also warned that the epidemic was spreading from high-risk groups to the general public.

    Estimates by the ministry, the WHO and UNAIDS show China has about 650,000 people living with HIV/AIDS, including 75,000 who have developed AIDS.

    The documentary, premiered in January 2003, has been viewed by about 15 million people.

A migrant worker shows an AIDS brochure in a skill training class in Sheqi County, central China's Henan Province, Nov. 29, 2006. The government of Sheqi County on Wednesday distributed AIDS brochures to migrant workers to improve their alertness agaisnt AIDS. (Xinhua Photo)
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Migrant workers show AIDS brochures in a skill training class in Sheqi County, central China's Henan Province, Nov. 29, 2006.  (Xinhua Photo)
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Editor: Pan Letian
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