Take the rights path

Peer educators compete to inflate condoms during a condom olympics presided over by self declared Africa King of Condoms, Stanley Ngara, a Kenya national, during a World Aids Day commemoration at the Kenyatta University campus in Nairobi on December 1, 2021.  - AFP PHOTO
Peer educators compete to inflate condoms during a condom olympics presided over by self declared Africa King of Condoms, Stanley Ngara, a Kenya national, during a World Aids Day commemoration at the Kenyatta University campus in Nairobi on December 1, 2021. - AFP PHOTO

THE world can end Aids – if everyone’s rights are protected.

With human rights at the centre, with communities in the lead, the world can end Aids as a public health threat by 2030.

The substantial progress that has been made in the HIV response is directly linked to progress in protecting human rights. In turn, the progress made through the HIV response has galvanised broader progress in realising the right to health and strengthening health systems.

But gaps in the realisation of human rights for all are keeping the world from getting on the path that ends Aids and are hurting public health, and now a surge in attacks on rights is threatening to undermine the progress that has been made.

Ending Aids requires that we reach and engage everyone who is living with, at risk for or affected by HIV – especially including people who have been most excluded and marginalised. Gender equality is an essential element of an approach to Aids that is grounded in human rights. Acceptance, respect and care are vital.

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Laws, policies and practices that punish, discriminate against or stigmatise people – because they are women or girls, or from key populations or from other marginalised communities – obstruct access to HIV prevention, testing, treatment and care. So do laws, policies and practices that hinder the work of people who are providing vital HIV services for affected communities or who are advocating for reforms.

The path that ends Aids is a rights path. Upholding the UN Declaration on Human Rights, and fostering inclusion of all communities are essential for ending Aids, for ensuring sustainable development and for human security. There is an urgent need to remove criminal and other laws which harm people’s rights, and an urgent need to enact laws and approaches which uphold the rights of every person. The mandates in the international human-rights framework have the force of law, and communities have the right to hold duty-bearers accountable for adherence to the human rights commitments they have made.

To highlight the narrative continuation in UNAids messaging, the campaign continues the imagery of a path that leaders need to choose. Here that path is signposted as the rights path.

Because change depends not on a moment but on a movement, the message “Take the rights path” will not only ring out on one day. It will be at the core of activities have built up across November, saw the release of the World Aids Day Report – entitled Take the Rights Path – on November 26, reach a crescendo on World Aids Day on December 1 and continue to echo throughout December and beyond.

The upholding of everyone’s human rights is an essential underpinning of an effective HIV response. This World Aids Day is a call to action to protect everyone’s health by protecting everyone’s rights. Leaders need to take the rights path. Source: www.unaids.org

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