Terrorism Isn’t the Only Global
Threat
World AIDS Day (Dec 1, 2001)
By Timothy E. Wirth
The senseless, monstrous acts of September 11th
have awakened us to the interdependent nature of the world in which we live.
The degree to which each of our lives is connected to individuals and events
all over the world has never been clearer. No nation can wall itself off from
the rest of the world. Global issues are not “over there” to be put off for “later”,
they are “here” and they must be dealt with “now.”
These global issues extend beyond terrorism - and
are equally important to
preserving the values that Americans have defended
over generations. Today, we must stand up to protect human rights and the more
than 20 million refugees around the world. We need to work to end poverty,
expand global trade and implement effective action to confront our global
environmental decline. And as we mark another World AIDS Day this week, we must
confront the most devastating health crisis in human history - HIV/AIDS.
In rural communities throughout the developing
world, the AIDS epidemic has a devastating impact not only on family health,
but exacts untold misery on entire communities. The causes and consequences of
the HIV/AIDS crisis are closely linked to wider development issues, including
poverty, malnutrition, exposure to other infectious diseases, gender
inequality, and insecure livelihoods.
When a rural farmer in Botswana contracts HIV, an
inadequate healthcare infrastructure may mean that he lives with the disease
for a decade or more before being tested. In that time, he will likely bring it
home to his family - infecting his wife and perhaps children. Even if a testing
infrastructure is available, lack of access to effective treatment may serve as
a powerful disincentive to testing. Because AIDS commonly effects young and
economically active segments of the population, the economic impacts cause
further desperation.
When the infection in that same rural Botswana
community spreads to a third of the people, the resulting loss of workers alone
can cripple the entire local economy. Land falls out of production; tilling,
planting, and harvesting are put off; creating further food shortages.
Overwhelming numbers of orphaned children are now raised by the elderly,
further straining local communities.
Imagine now, that one-third of everyone in the
community: teachers, soldiers, policeman, healthcare workers and even
politicians become infected. This pandemic can cripple economic development,
erode environmental protection, increase already devastating poverty and
possibly erase decades of social investment and gains in political stability.
As individuals, as organizations, and as nations,
we cannot sit idly by and
watch as this epidemic explodes. The UN Foundation,
a private nonprofit
organization created to support the work of the
United Nations, has
committed nearly $50 million to combat the spread
of HIV/AIDS and help
individuals effected by the disease around the
world. We are working in
partnership with the UN to support community-based
programs - especially
those that emphasize the importance of empowering
adolescent girls to reduce their risk of contracting HIV. The international
community has extensive experience with these efforts - but to date there have
not been sufficient resources or political commitment.
Currently, a little more than $1 billion a year is
spent globally in the fight against AIDS. Experts from Washington think tanks
like CSIS to international health organizations like the WHO believe that even conservative
estimates require expenditures to more than quadruple in the next four years in
order to avoid an all out human catastrophe. In the five months prior to September 11th more than
$1.5 billion was pledged to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria. In the two months since the terrorist attacks, the pledges have
dwindled to less than $2,000. Certainly, as we reach out to help those affected
by September 11th, we must also continue to support those facing a
different, urgent threat to their lives, families, communities and nations, and
ultimately, to political stability and economic freedom.
In the post- September 11th world, we
have an opportunity to understand the
nature of long-term, trans-national challenges like
HIV/AIDS. And, we have a
responsibility to bring to such long-term global
challenges the same
persistent, dedicated, and purposeful campaign that
has been brought to bear in the war against terrorism.
Timothy Wirth is the President of the United
Nations Foundation and Better World Fund. These organizations were founded in
1998 through a major financial commitment from R.E. “Ted” Turner to support and
strengthen the work of the United Nations.
Wirth began his political career as a
White House Fellow under President
Lyndon Johnson and was Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Education in the Nixon Administration. In 1975, Wirth
returned to his home state and successfully ran for the U.S. House of Representatives,
representing Colorado’s 2nd Congressional District from 1975-1987.
In the House, he concentrated his efforts in the areas of communications
technology and budget policy. In 1987, Wirth was elected to the U.S. Senate
where he focussed on environmental issues, especially global climate change and
population stabilization. After a successful term, Wirth chose not to run for
re-election. Following those two
decades of elected politics, Wirth served in the U.S. Department of State as the first Undersecretary for Global
Affairs from 1993 to 1997. In this position he coordinated U.S. foreign policy
in the areas of refugees, population, environment, science, human rights and
narcotics. As President of the UN
Foundation since its inception in early 1998, Wirth has organized and led the
formulation of the Foundation’s mission and program priorities, which include
the environment, women and population, children’s health and peace, security
and human rights. The Foundation also engages in extensive public advocacy,
resource mobilization, and institutional strengthening efforts on behalf of the
UN. Prior to entering politics, Wirth
was in private business in Colorado. He is a graduate of Harvard College and
holds a PhD from Stanford University. The recipient of numerous awards and
honorary degrees, he also served as a member of the Harvard Board of Overseers.
Wirth is married to Wren Wirth, the President of the Winslow Foundation; they
have two grown children.