Steve Race
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Dr Chambers
I totally agree with my hon. Friend, who sits on the Foreign Affairs Committee; that is an insightful point.
Many of us will remember “It’s a Sin”, Channel 4’s extraordinary drama about the HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s. It was joyful and heartbreaking, and it reminded us that behind every statistic was a real person—sons, daughters, friends and partners, all with lives full of love and potential. But HIV today is not a death sentence. Science has done its job. Because of one pill a day, or even a single injection every few months, people can live long and healthy lives. The UN’s 95-95-95 target—that 95% of people living with HIV know their status, that 95% of those are on treatment, and that 95% of those are achieving viral suppression—is within reach, but it will not happen by accident. It requires commitment, funding and global co-operation.
Steve Race (Exeter) (Lab)
I am delighted that the Prime Minister has chosen to co-host the eighth replenishment of the Global Fund, alongside the Republic of South Africa. I put on record my thanks to my hon. Friend the Member for Gedling (Michael Payne) for working hard over the last year to corral myself and other colleagues to work with the Government to make the case for the Global Fund. Does the hon. Member agree with me that by co-hosting the summit, which is a good thing in itself, we are showing that the UK remains at the forefront of global development, and that doing so in partnership with South Africa exemplifies our commitment to working with other nations to achieve our shared ambitions?
Dr Chambers
Yes, these are really important summits, and it is important to show international co-operation.
The Global Fund has been central to the progress I have spoken about. It has helped to save millions of lives and allowed millions of babies to be born HIV-free. Yet progress is fragile and without the sustained investment mentioned by the hon. Member for Exeter (Steve Race), the gains made will unravel and history will repeat itself.
The United States AIDS programme—the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief—launched more than 20 years ago, has saved around 25 million lives. It supports testing, treatment and prevention in more than 50 countries. To show the impact of cuts on these programmes, following funding cuts to that initiative earlier this year, an estimated 120,000 people have died—more than the population of a constituency.