This is an archive of the Treatment Action Campaign's public documents from December 1998 until October 2008. I created this website because the TAC's website appears unmaintained and people were concerned that it
was becoming increasingly hard to find important documents.

The menu items have been slightly edited and a new stylesheet applied to the site. But none of the documents have been edited, not even for minor errors. The text appears on this site as obtained from the Internet Archive.

The period covered by the archive encompassed the campaign for HIV medicines, the civil disobedience campaigns, the Competition Commission complaints, the 2008 xenophobic violence and the PMTCT, Khayelitsha health workers and Matthias Rath court cases.

MEMORANDUM

Global Manifesto to Save 34 Million Lives:

Measures Needed to Rapidly Expand Access to Essential Treatments for HIV/AIDS

Health before profits!

Sunday July 9th 2000
TO:


The Treatment Action Campaign and Health Global Access Project Coalition (Health GAP) have mobilized the largest coalition of concerned citizens ever assembled to insist on the right to health care and access to life-sustaining medicines.

Our march today demanding access to treatment is the most broad-based in the twenty-year history of the HIV epidemic. We bring before you thousands of people from many different countries and perspectives. On our march today are thousands of people living with HIV and AIDS, our friends and families, as well as trade unionists, representatives of political parties, and a wide range of non-governmental organizations. We represent organizations and movements in over 34 countries, many of which cannot be physically present with us today.

We are all united with a single purpose, to ensure that everyone -- including people with HIV and AIDS -- has access to their fundamental right to health.

Underpinning our demands are several issues, which we ask you to recognize publicly:
 


Recognizing these truths has implications for governments of the North and South, pharmaceutical companies, UNAIDS, and civil society. We will ensure that history measures your response from this day onward.

We would like to address specific proposals to each of the parties we have called here today:

1. TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN GOVERNMENT

The South African Government has a unique potential to right the wrongs and inequalities that exist around AIDS. Not only is South Africa the worst affected country in the world, but you have the moral legitimacy that has accrued to a nation that has risen peacefully from apartheid, under the leadership of former President Nelson Mandela. In your own words, AIDS is a "new struggle". In the words of the Organisation of African Unity¹s recently signed Ouagadougou Commitment (May 2000) "health constitutes a right and a foundation for socio-economic development," whereas the AIDS epidemic is a major "public health, development and security problem for Africa."

We call on the SA Government to:
 


2. TO THE GOVERNMENTS OF THE USA AND EUROPEAN UNION

People from poor countries cannot help but believe that whilst your governments will draw massively from public funds when your own security is threatened, the lives of poor and black people in the emerging Œglobal village¹ are considered dispensable and unworthy of protection.
The policies of trade liberalization that you endorse and have pursued through bodies such as the World Bank, IMF and World Trade Organization have had a devastating impact on social services, and particularly health services.

We demand that you:
 


3. TO THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF PHARMACEUTICAL MANUFACTURERS¹ ASSOCIATION (IFPMA)

The pricing policy defended by the IFPMA, where patent monopolies allow your members to place essential drugs beyond the influence of market competition, has become the cause of an unprecedented burden of illness and death. We do not dispute your need to recover investments in research and development, or to profit from these investments. But, in your hands, the profit motive has led to the development of new medicines that are far out of reach of the people who need them.

We call on all members of the IFPMA to:
 


WE SPECIFICALLY DEMAND THAT PFIZER, INC.:
 


WE SPECIFICALLY DEMAND THAT BOEHRINGER INGELHEIM:
 


4. TO UNAIDS

We salute the efforts made by UNAIDS and its predecessor the Global Programme on AIDS (GPA). But they have been insufficient. In your own words "18.8 million people around the world have died of AIDS, 3.8 million of them children."

But we reject the manner in which you already appear to have given up on the lives of those who today live with HIV. You say, "34.3 million are now living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Barring a miracle, most of these will die over the next decade or so."

We do not need a miracle. We need political leadership, resolve and action on the recognition that health is a human right. UNAIDS is vested with this responsibility.

We therefore call on UNAIDS to:
 


5. TO THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY (IAS) , CLINICIANS AND RESEARCHERS

We salute your commitment to understanding HIV and to research into treatments and vaccines.

We call on you to:
 


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In conclusion we request:
 


"investing in health is a measurable, results-oriented and effective way to reduce poverty Š access for all to essential drugs and vaccines is also a short cut to lower mortality and better health for the entire population. Improving such access is among the most effective health interventions any country can make. Health is not a peripheral issue that only more affluent economies can afford to spend money on. It is a central element of development. And access to drugs is an essential element of any health policy."

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The millions of people who stand behind our call are awaiting a meaningful response to these demands. We will not go away.