What I’m going to tell leaders in Davos
Charlize Theron argues that now is the time for a big push to defeat AIDS.
In the relatively short time AIDS has been known to the world, it has divided communities. It has killed because of stigma and ignorance. It has left millions of orphans. And it has caused untold suffering in sickness and death. My home country of South Africa has felt the impact of this pandemic in a way that is simply unacceptable. It is nearly impossible to be South African and not have been affected by HIV/AIDS in some way.
The scars that have been left by this disease are felt globally and will never go away, but we can beat it.
I founded my Africa Outreach Project, CTAOP, because I believe that working to help keep youth safe from HIV is pivotal to turning the tide. We work with community-engaged organizations in Africa that address the key drivers of the disease. It’s exciting to see the momentum building among the youth to take responsibility and ownership over their own health.
Seeing this progress and knowing the advances made on a global scale are encouraging, but we need to continue the fight. This is why I am in Davos this week at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting as an advocate for the millions of Africans whose lives depend on programmes funded by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. While I’m there, I’d like to take the opportunity to tell the participating politicians and CEOs a few things:
- We are making progress. As a South African, I can tell you that there are fewer funerals, fewer youth in orphanages, and more empty hospital beds than 10 years ago. We have gone from fewer than 300,000 people receiving AIDS treatment in the developing world in 2002, to 8.6 million today.
- We are not finished yet. As long as there is even one young person out there without access to comprehensive health information and healthcare, we will not defeat AIDS.
- Come and see the amazing results we are seeing and need to sustain. I have been blessed in my role as a UN Messenger of Peace to have travelled and met the people on the frontlines of the fight against AIDS around the world. It is their strength and resilience that motivates me to keep going.
- We need a big push. History will judge us by how we choose to confront this watershed moment. It will be up to donors to commit the political will and financial resources needed, even in these times of economic austerity. And it is up to us to push for these commitments.
We all get to decide what we want to do to make something better in our world. Supporting the big push to defeat AIDS so all young people are empowered to lead healthy, HIV-free lives is what I have decided to do.
The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria was launched at the 2002 Annual Meeting in Davos.
Author: Charlize Theron, is a shortlist candidate for the Crystal Award, actress and founder of the Charlize Theron African Outreach Project, on her hopes for the Annual Meeting.
Image: A student makes an AIDS red ribbon on World AIDS Day. REUTERS/Jason Lee
Don't miss any update on this topic
Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.
License and Republishing
World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
Forum Stories newsletter
Bringing you weekly curated insights and analysis on the global issues that matter.