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NEWS
AIDS in 5 Nations
Called Security Threat
By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN
LANGLEY, Va., Sept. 30 - Rates of infection from the AIDS virus in five of
the world's most populous countries are rising so fast that they pose
potential security threats to their regions and to the United States, a
group that advises the Central Intelligence Agency said here today.
The countries - China, Ethiopia, India,
Nigeria and Russia - have 40 percent of the world's population and by 2010
will have more H.I.V.-infected people than any other five countries, an
agency official said.
By 2010, the number of infected people in
those countries will grow to an estimated 50 million to 75 million, from
the current estimate of 14 million to 23 million, said the group, the
National Intelligence Council. It is composed of individuals from the
government and academic and private sectors.
H.I.V., the AIDS virus, could harm the economic, social, political and
military structure in each of the five countries, a C.I.A. official said
in releasing the declassified parts of the council's report.
H.I.V. would spark tensions over spending priorities, driving up health
care costs and sharpening military manpower shortages, Dr. David F.
Gordon, a C.I.A. official and the report's author, said at a news
conference at the intelligence agency's headquarters here.
For instance, Dr. Gordon said, the AIDS epidemic in Russia is likely to
help shape how that country emerges in the post-Soviet era. Up to
one-third of prospective conscripts to Russia's military services are
deemed unfit for service because of H.I.V. or chronic hepatitis from drug
use, the report said.
Dr. Gordon said the AIDS epidemic could generate political tensions in
Nigeria, a major oil producer. He also said the epidemic could weaken
Nigeria's peacekeeping role for the United Nations in Africa.
Nigeria's leadership has been the most active among the five countries in
trying to raise awareness about AIDS, in part by publicly warning about
the risk of "extinction" of Africa's population, the report said.
"The Nigerian military, concerned about the loss of key personnel from
AIDS, now mandates training about the disease for soldiers," it said.
In Ethiopia, many soldiers contracted H.I.V. during the civil war in the
1980's by having contact with multiple sex partners. When the war ended in
1991, thousands of infected soldiers and prostitutes returned home,
spreading H.I.V. and AIDS in their villages and towns, and the threat
continues, the report said.
Although the governments of China, India and Nigeria are beginning to
focus more attention on the threat, it said, all five countries need
"dramatic shifts in priorities" to control their epidemics by 2010 because
the disease has built up significant momentum, health services are
inadequate and the cost of education and treatment will be overwhelming.
The report was given to the governments of each of the five countries
about two months ago as a measure to help them combat their epidemics, Dr.
Gordon said. Although replies have not been received, the group looks
forward to a dialogue with the countries, he said.
Dr. Gordon now directs transnational issues for the C.I.A.
The AIDS epidemic is in a different stage of development in each country,
but in all of them it is in a much earlier stage than it is in the
worst-affected areas in central and southern Africa. In all five
countries, risky sexual behaviors are fueling the epidemic, but the rates
of spread differ, the agency said.
H.I.V. is spreading to wider circles through heterosexual sex in India,
the movement of infected migrated workers in China and frequent amnesty
releases of large numbers of infected prison inmates and rising
prostitution in Russia.
The council said that in deriving its estimates, it gathered data from
governments and nongovernmental organizations and consulted extensively
with scientific and AIDS experts in and out of the American government.
But it did not collaborate with the governments of the five countries.
The report cautioned that there was a strong likelihood that the
inconsistent use of anti-H.I.V. drugs and the manufacture in foreign
countries of unregulated, substandard drugs would probably lead to greater
spread of drug-resistant strains of H.I.V.
The report is the latest in a series of papers by the National
Intelligence Council on AIDS since the late 1980's. It expands on one the
group issued in December 1999 on the global threat of infectious diseases,
including H.I.V., on the United States. The United States has declared the
global epidemic of AIDS a national security threat.
The findings also generally affirm a similar bleak warning issued by the
United Nations at the 14th international conference on AIDS in Barcelona,
Spain, in July, its first long-range forecast of the global epidemic. At
that time, the United Nations said AIDS would claim an additional 65
million lives by 2020, more than triple the number who died in the first
20 years of the epidemic, unless more countries vastly expanded their
prevention programs.
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