By Sophie Lambroschini
In the past year, the number of registered cases of HIV -- the virus that
causes AIDS -- has doubled in Russia, a sudden surge in an epidemic that hit
the country later than elsewhere in Europe. This week, in advance of the
annual World AIDS Day (1 December), the country's top health officials are
calling for more financial aid and more prevention-oriented efforts. Moscow
correspondent Sophie Lambroschini reports.
Moscow, 28 November 2000 (RFE/RL) -- Russia today has only 418 registered
cases of AIDS, with some 700 people known to have died from the usually fatal
disease in the past. But the country's health authorities are warning that
hundreds of thousands may already be infected with HIV -- the virus that
triggers AIDS -- and that more people will be infected in the next few years
when the epidemic shifts from intravenous drug users to the general
population.
Russia' Health Ministry classified HIV as an "epidemic" earlier this year.
Two months ago, a United Nations representative in Moscow, Philippe
Elghouayel, said that Russia now has the highest HIV infection rate in the
world.
Russia currently has about 70,000 registered HIV cases -- a number that has
doubled over the past year -- of which almost all are intravenous drug users.
The UN's World Health Organization estimates Russia's non-diagnosed HIV cases
at about 130,000. But Vadim Pokrovsky, Russia's top AIDS specialist, says
that the real number of HIV cases could be between 300,000 and 400,000. A
similar figure was cited by the director of the UN's UNAIDS department, Peter
Piot, during a trip to Moscow earlier this month.
At a Moscow press conference today, Aleksandr Goliusov, who is charge of
combating AIDS at Russia's Health Ministry, acknowledged that the
government's earlier efforts had to be overhauled because authorities had not
expected an epidemic.
"At the moment, we are finishing work on a new program for the period from
2002 to 2007. The problem is that the old program was adopted in 1996, when
the epidemiological situation was different. At the time, we had not yet seen
the spread of HIV among drug users that make up 90 percent of all new cases
now."
Drug addiction is a widespread problem among Russian youth, who consume
anything from heroin to cheap pharmacy mixes costing about one dollar. Heroin
addiction is relatively common, with some cases even having turned up in some
of Moscow's elite scientific institutes.
Pokrovsky and Goliusov agree that future AIDS prevention should target the
population at large in order to hold back the spread of the disease from
intravenous drug users to transmission through heterosexual relations. The
rate of sexually transmitted diseases in Russia has increased dramatically
over the past 10 years, indicating that a similar evolution of HIV could
occur.
Pokrovsky told today's press conference that Russia, like many African
countries, cannot afford the $1,000 monthly cost of HIV therapies available
to the fortunate few in the West. He says it must therefore concentrate on
prevention policies, taking advantage of an educated population that watches
television and reads the newspapers to get its message across.
But Pokrovsky notes that, as in some other countries, a battle is going on in
Russia between a conservative lobby and what he calls a "democratic" one. He
says the conservatives -- influenced by religious or communist values -- are
against full sex education in the schools. The "democrats," he says, believe
children should be taught to take into account that many people have several
sexual partners in the course of their lives -- and are therefore more at
risk of contracting the disease.
"We can clearly see this battle inside the Education Ministry, where there is
still no state policy on sex education in schools. One proposed program
earlier was criticized and rejected for allegedly pressing open and free
sexual behavior on children."
But Russia's Health Ministry insists that the main problem is simply lack of
money. Officials note that the anti-AIDS program set up four years ago only
began receiving financing last year. And this year, less that $1.5 million,
or 20 percent of the sum allocated, was actually paid out to the ministry.
Most of it has gone to buying and distributing prevention kits.
The government points out that it helps through other forms of support.
Non-governmental organizations, or NGOs, combating AIDS receive free time on
state television. And Moscow's city council allows free advertisement space
for prevention ads.
In addition, Russia also receives financial aid from abroad. In addition to
help from international NGOs, the UN's anti-AIDS program has contributed
about $750,000 this year, and the World Bank recently offered Russia a
$150-million loan to help fight the disease.