What We Do

World AIDS Day 2020

Date
1 Dec, 2020
Venue

Virtual

Organiser
PANCAP Coordinating Unit
Contact

pancap@caricom.org

Event Summary

The theme for the 2020 observance of World AIDS Day is “Global solidarity, shared responsibility”.

Every year, on 1 December, the world commemorates World AIDS Day. People around the world unite to show support for People Living with and affected by HIV and to remember those who lost their lives to AIDS.

Global Solidarity, Shared Responsibility

In 2020, the world’s attention has been focused by the COVID-19 pandemic on health and how pandemics affect lives and livelihoods. COVID-19 is showing once again how health is interlinked with other critical issues, such as reducing inequality, human rights, gender equality, social protection and economic growth. With this in mind, this year, the theme of World AIDS Day is “Global solidarity, shared responsibility”.

COVID-19 has demonstrated that, during a pandemic, no one is safe until everyone is safe. Leaving people behind is not an option if we are to succeed. Eliminating stigma and discrimination, putting people at the centre and grounding our responses in human rights and gender-responsive approaches are crucial to ending the colliding pandemics of HIV and COVID-19.

The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the entrenched inequalities existing in our societies. This health crisis, like many others, is hitting the poorest and the most vulnerable the hardest. We have seen how the COVID-19 crisis has exacerbated the challenges faced by People Living with HIV, women and girls and key populations, including in accessing life-saving health care.  We have also seen how the crisis has widened the social and economic inequalities that increase the vulnerability of marginalized groups to HIV. However, this crisis has also been a wake-up call, an opportunity to do things differently—better, and together.

In many respects, the defeat of AIDS as a public health threat depends on how the world responds to COVID-19.

The leadership and engagement of communities, instrumental in the success of the AIDS response, has also been key in responding to COVID-19. We have seen countless examples of how community activism and solidarity have, once again, been paramount in providing people affected by HIV with information, services, social protection and hope. However, such solidarity cannot be the sole responsibility of communities. Governments, donors, faith leaders, civil society and every one of us need to contribute to making the world a healthier place.

COVID-19 has also shown how political will can bring about change. We have seen governments putting in place extraordinary policy measures and financial resources to save lives and protect livelihoods. We have seen collaboration between countries to ensure continuity of HIV treatment, and we have seen countries rallying behind the international call to make a COVID-19 vaccine a People’s Vaccine, available to all equitably. As we enter the last decade of action to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030, we need the political will to reach our goal. It can be done!

Global solidarity and shared responsibility require us to view global health responses, including the AIDS response, in a new way. It requires the world to come together to ensure that:

Health is fully financed. Governments must come together and find new ways to ensure that health care is fully funded. No one country can do it alone. Domestic and international funding for health must be increased.

Health systems are strengthened. Investments in the AIDS response in the past few decades have helped to strengthen health systems and have been supporting the COVID-19 response. But more needs to be done to improve health systems further and protect health-care workers.

Access is ensured. Life-saving medicines, vaccines and diagnostics must be considered as public goods. There must be global solidarity and shared responsibility to ensure that no individual, community or country is left behind in accessing life-saving health commodities.

Human rights are respected. A human rights approach applied everywhere will produce sustainable results for health. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed fault lines in society and how key populations have been left behind in many parts of the world.

The rights of women and girls and gender equality are at the centre. The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly affected women’s livelihoods, which have been disproportionally affected by lockdown measures, and lockdowns have increased violence against women in household settings. Women must be included in decision-making processes that affect their lives. The world cannot afford rollbacks in decades of hard-won gains in gender equality.

Now is the moment for bold leadership for equal societies, the right to health for all and a robust and equitable global recovery. This World AIDS Day join us in calling on countries to step up their efforts to achieve healthier societies. This World AIDS Day let us demand global solidarity and shared responsibility.

For more information, visit the PANCAP World AIDS Day 2020 web page: https://pancap.org/pancap-events/world-aids-day-2020/

Helpful link:

UNAIDS World AIDS Day 2020: https://www.unaids.org/en/resources/campaigns/world-aids-day-2020

Event Description

In observance of World AIDS Day 2020, PANCAP will host a series of virtual activities under the theme “Global solidarity, shared responsibility”.

Media Sensitisation Webinar – “Global Solidarity and Shared Responsibility for ending AIDS”

25 November 2020

10:00 AM to 12:00 PM

World AIDS Day Observance – CARICOM Secretariat

1 December 2020

Launch of World AIDS Day 2020 video message

1 December 2020

Event Videos

Message from Dr Rosmond Adams, Director, PANCAP on the occasion of World AIDS Day 2020

Message from Victoria Nibarger, PEPFAR Coordinator, Caribbean Regional Program - World AIDS Day 2020

Message from Ivan Cruickshank, Executive Director, Caribbean Vulnerable Communities Coalition (CVC)

Message from Renatta Langlais, Vice-Chair, Caribbean Regional Network of People Living with HIV and AIDS (CRN+) on the occasion of World AIDS Day 2020

Message from Jessie Schutt-Aine, Subregional Program Coordinator, Caribbean PAHO/WHO