Audio By Carbonatix
A global conference on HIV/Aids has opened in Mexico City, a quarter of a century after the disease first became widely known.
Figures released ahead of the meeting reveal that the number of people with the condition around the world has gone down slightly overall.
However, infection rates are still rising in some countries and access to the right treatment is also an issue.
Across the world 33 million people are affected by the syndrome.
The six-day conference was preceded by an awareness march, a photo exhibition and other events.
About 20,000 scientists, government officials and campaigners are in Mexico City for the event.
Worrying spread
Former US President Bill Clinton is due to attend on Monday.
Since Aids first became known, 25 million people have died.
In one positive development, US President George W Bush recently won backing to triple US spending on combating the syndrome.
But in some countries like Russia and China, and even Germany and the UK, the rates of infection are rising, the BBC's Duncan Kennedy reports from Mexico City.
In the US, better detection methods have just shown the figures there have been underestimated by about 30%.
And in Africa, home to 70% of cases, access to the right drugs is improving but there are not enough health care workers to administer them.
There are concerns, too about the human rights of sufferers who are often too scared to seek treatment.
It all means that the 17th international HIV/Aids conference has much to discuss, our correspondent says.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
FDI inflows hit US$2.61bn in 2025 – GIPC
59 minutes -
Sixteen pupils killed in Kenya school fire
1 hour -
Ghana’s tax gap: New levies loom in mid-year budget
1 hour -
Ashanti region: Mining pit collapse kills 4 illegal miners at Bepotenten Sukuumu
1 hour -
Asanko Scholarship Programme supports 31 students in the Amansie West and South districts
2 hours -
When the message excludes the customer: Insights from MTN’s tariff announcement on financial inclusion in Ghana
2 hours -
Weija Dam spillage submerges Tetegu, Sampah Valley, and Choice communities
2 hours -
Toyota Ghana launches new RAV4 Hybrid with self-charging technology
2 hours -
ILAPI commends Ministry of Finance on the Inter-Agency Working Group to manage unclaimed funds
2 hours -
Pregnant woman from Ghana detained with child at Dulles Airport, ACLU says
2 hours -
Today’s front pages: Thursday, May 28, 2026
2 hours -
51km of Accra-Kumasi Expressway corridor cleared; compensation plans underway – Finance Minister
2 hours -
AfDB forecasts 5% GDP growth for Ghana as macroeconomic indicators strengthen
2 hours -
Menstrual poverty: United Pension Trustees calls for an end to menstruation stigma
3 hours -
Vaccine survey reveals strong public confidence as Ghana pushes local manufacturing agenda
3 hours