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South Africa: A timeline of HIV/AIDS activism

JOHANNESBURG: In a new book, "Fighting for our Lives" the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), an HIV/AIDS lobby group, looks back on more than a decade of activism. IRIN/PlusNews presents a timeline of 12 years of highlights as the group translated action into wider access to HIV treatment:
South Africa: A timeline of HIV/AIDS activism

1998 - The TAC is launched on the steps of Cape Town's St George's Cathedral with its first campaign - calling for the provision of the antiretroviral (ARV) Zidovudine (AZT) for pregnant, HIV-positive mothers to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT). The organization's first statement also urges the government to develop a plan to provide affordable treatment for all HIV-positive South Africans;

March 1999 - After starting a petition for the introduction of PMTCT services, TAC members march on one of the country's largest hospitals, Chris Hani-Baragwaneth, in Johannesburg's largest township of Soweto. TAC protesters stage a lie-in at the hospital's gate;

June 1999 - Thabo Mbeki is elected president and Manto Tshabalala-Msimang is appointed health minister, ushering in an era of "government-endorsed AIDS denialism", according to the book. Later, a Harvard University study will estimate that Mbeki's delay in rolling out ARVs caused the death of 300,000 South Africans in the next five years;

Read the full article on http://www.plusnews.org.

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