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Walk on great wall to raise AIDS awareness
BEIJING—Members of public,
celebrities and condom manufacturers embarked on a “Great AIDS Walk” at
the Great Wall on a chilly Sunday morning to generate funds for the
country’s fight against HIV/AIDS and raise public awareness of the
disease.
The four-kilometer walk at Juyongguan Great Wall, jointly organized by
UNAIDS and China Red Cross Foundation, with the support of the Global
Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria (GBC), attracted more
than 2,000 people.
Joining the public were health officials, international organization
representatives, NGOs, 1960s ping-pong world champion Zhuang Zedong,
Miss China International, foreigners and private sector sponsors.
Volunteers, most college students, decorated their clothes with blown-up
condoms while handing out condoms to passers-by, and children enjoyed
themselves by ballooning condoms.
Su Juxiang, vice-president of the Red Cross Society of China (RCSC),
said the RCSC, as a non-governmental organization that played an
increasingly important role in China, would be “committed” to the
“humanitarian” control and prevention of AIDS. “AIDS is a strategic
issue concerning the rise and fall of the nation,” said Su.
Khalid Malik, UN Resident Coordinator in China, said discrimination was
the biggest challenge faced by the fight against the disease, but
Chinese leaders including Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao had showed great
efforts in eliminating discrimination, as shown by the theme of this
year’s World AIDS Day — “leadership”— which was marked on Saturday.
According to the RCSC, the event was aimed at raising awareness of AIDS
issues in China, mobilizing leaders in various sectors and generating
funds to support the AIDS campaign via the China Red Cross Foundation (CRCF).
Wang Rupeng, the CRCF secretary-general, said a total of 150,000 yuan
(19,700 U.S. dollars) had been raised through the event as each
participant had donated at least 100 yuan (13.16 U.S. dollars). “All
donations for this event will be used to build a ‘Sunlight Garden’ to
conduct peer education and training related to AIDS treatment and care,”
said Wang.—Xinhua |