By Hina Kiyani
The HIV epidemic has always been far more than a health issue. The virus thrives on inequality, insecurity, stigma and discrimination, marginalisation, criminalisation and exclusion. That’s why the struggle to end the AIDS epidemic continues to be inseparable from the struggle for women’s rights and from the struggle to end all forms of discrimination.
Women and girls continue to be among the worst affected by the epidemic because too often our societies do not value or respect their rights to a decent education, including to comprehensive sexuality education; to sexual and reproductive health and rights; and to their equal right to work and to financial independence. It all adds up to a denial of their life chances and of their opportunities to make informed choices about their health and their future well-being. These bad policies, laws and harmful social norms are having a terrible impact on women and girls. Just consider the facts.
Worldwide, AIDS-related illnesses remain the biggest killer of women aged 15-49 years. In sub-Saharan Africa, four in five new infections among adolescents aged 15-19-years are among girls. Young women in sub-Sharan Africa aged 15-24 years are twice as likely to be living with HIV than men. It is unacceptable. It is avoidable and it must change.
We must transform the landscape for women and girls. To end AIDS by 2030, we must put a stop to gender-based violence, inequality, and insecurity, and ensure that women and girls have equal opportunities in education, employment and health.
Women and adolescent girls are demanding their right to information, education and health, to have their sexual and reproductive health and rights respected, and to be treated with dignity. Feminist leadership in this struggle is vital, and women all over the world are already showing the way. Governments must act on these demands by providing the resources and services to protect their rights and properly respond to their rights and perspectives.
We need to change our societies so that everyone’s life is considered precious and valuable and that human rights are respected for everyone. We will not end AIDS while marginalised communities, including LGBTI communities, people who use drugs, sex workers, prisoners and migrants live in fear of violence, criminalisation and the denial of their right to basic services. These groups of people and their sexual partners account for more than 54% of new infections globally.
They have human rights too, including the right to health. It is time to turn words into practice.
Feminism, human rights and zero discrimination are principles that are deeply rooted across the world. UNAIDS is fully committed to working with all its allies and partners globally, including the communities of people living with and affected by HIV to cultivate these shared values for social justice and to change our societies for good. There is no other way. To end AIDS, we must end inequality.