
31 JANUARY 2001
Contact: Asia Russell (267) 475-2645 (cell) Kate Krauss (215) 545-3104
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FIRST ANTI-WEF ARRESTS:
ACT UP NEW YORKERS demand corporations
provide AIDS drugs for their workers in poor countries
(Thursday January 31) 7 Members of ACT UP New York were arrested this
morning at the crack of dawn, among the first demonstrators to be arrested
confronting the World Economic Forum¼s annual meeting.
The protesters were arrested while dropping two massive banners in busy
downtown and midtown New York City, the site of the World Economic Forum¼s
meeting. The banners demanded that corporations pay for treatment for the
tens of thousands of HIV-positive workers they employ in poor countries, and
condemned what activists call Bush¼s measly contribution to the fight
against the global AIDS crisis.
Corporations would rather wring their hands and count the bodies than
provide treatment for their HIV-positive employees in South Africa, in
India, all over the world, said Sharonann Lynch, among the 7 activists
arrested at 6 am this morning at the Holland Tunnel. Super-profitable
corporations like Coke and Shell can afford to pay for treatment for all of
their workers with HIV/AIDSãbut their greed stops them. They are refusing to
lift a finger to save their own sick employees.
Activists anticipate the release of a report from the Global Health
Initiative of the World Economic Forum on the Business Response to AIDS,
Tuberculosis, and Malaria on February 2. This report will present best
practices for corporations responding to the global AIDS crisis, but will
be silent on the issue of access to the life extending AIDS drugs that are
widely available in rich countries.
Activists state that high-profile announcements including that of the
Coca-Cola Corporation in June 2001, papered over the controversial issue of
access to anti-HIV drugs. Coke promised anti-HIV treatment only to their
"direct employees"--a fraction of their workforce, said Asia Russell of ACT
UP Philadelphia. They excluded access for thousands of bottlers facing
death in Africaãscratch the surface, and they are refusing to make a real
commitment.
The World Economic Forum is endorsing mass death by skirting the issue of
access to affordable AIDS drugs, said Mark Milano of ACT UP New York, who
was also arrested today. Corporations must use their resources to pay for
workplace treatmentãincluding access to anti-HIV drugs. The Global Health
Initiative should be condemned for refusing to mandate access to HIV drugs
for workers.
This action came on the heels of President Bush¼s announcement that he would
request Congress reduced the U.S. contribution to the Global AIDS Fund to
only $200 million for FY 2003. The World Health Organization recently
released a report stating that $12 billion is needed to address AIDS, TB and
malaria worldwide. The airline bailout was $14 billion. Bush is sending
$200 million to a Global Fund that requires billions, reports John Bell of
ACT UP. Tax cuts for the wealthy? Billions in pork for corporations
disguised as åeconomic stimulus¼? No problem for President Bush. He is
turning his back on a pandemic worse than the Black Plague.
Protesters are being taken en masse to the Brooklyn Naval Yard; ACT UP
believes that the New York Police Department will detain protesters until
the WEF meeting concludes. Preventative detention violates the right of
Americans to due process, said Joe Stevens of ACT UP. We condemn any
action of the NYPD that violates the fundamental right of Americans to
non-violent protest.
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