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Wednesday, 6 September 2006, 10:58 GMT 11:58 UK

Aids experts condemn SA minister

Aids activists More than 60 international experts on HIV/Aids have called for the resignation of the South African health minister because of her stance on Aids.

Manto Tshabalala-Msimang tells those with HIV to eat garlic and beetroot.

In a letter sent to President Thabo Mbeki, the academics called the government's health policy "disastrous and pseudo-scientific".

"Many people [in South Africa] are dying unnecessarily" because they cannot get Aids drugs, the letter says.

South Africa is one of the countries worst affected by Aids, with some 5.5m people with HIV.

'Embarrassment'

"To have as health minister a person who now has no international respect is an embarrassment to the South African government," say the experts.

They include 1975 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine David Baltimore and Robert Gallo, the developer of the first HIV blood test and co-discoverer of HIV as the cause of Aids.

South Africa's Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang

They declared that Anti-Retroviral drugs (ARVs) were the only medication currently available that could alleviate the consequences of HIV infection.

Three years ago, the government promised to give ARVs to some 380,000 people but so far fewer than half this number are being treated, the letter says.

At last month's international Aids conference in Toronto, United Nations special envoy for Aids in Africa Stephen Lewis said South Africa promoted a "lunatic fringe" attitude to HIV/Aids.

The South African government has said it will change the way its Aids message is communicated.

But Mr Mbeki has rejected previous calls to sack Ms Tshabalala-Msimang.



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Related to this story:
S Africa probes Aids asylum bids (03 Sep 06 |  Africa )
S Africa to change Aids message (24 Aug 06 |  Africa )
South Africa Aids policy attacked (19 Aug 06 |  Africa )
SA health minister urged to quit (18 Aug 06 |  Africa )
South Africa's broken HIV promises (26 Apr 05 |  Africa )
Million receiving ARVs in Africa (16 Aug 06 |  Africa )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
International Aids Conference
TAC
Aids Law Project
Department of Health
UN Aids
The experts' letter
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