|
|
| |
 |
At the preparatory meeting in May, I had been the only young person to represent a non-governmental organization. This time, there were about 65 young people from all over the world.
- Naina |
|
|
| |
|
|
Transitions
Volume 14, No. 1,
October 2001
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
Making Waves
at the United Nations
By Naina Kaur Dhingra, Member, International
Youth Leadership Council, Advocates for Youth
My
father, a Republican, once asked why I hadn't picked the
environment or saving whales as my "cause." My reply was that I had too
much of a social conscience not to be affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Since the age of 14, I have been involved with the issue of HIV/AIDS
as a peer educator and, more recently, as a member of Advocates for Youth's
International Youth Leadership Council.
The International Youth Leadership Council began in October 2000, with
a mission to educate policy makers, the media, and the American public
about the importance of increasing U.S. funding for global HIV/AIDS education
and services and for international family planning. This June, Council
members, Mai Pham, Sean Barry, and I, had the opportunity to attend the
United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS (UNGASS)
together with Marcela Howell, Advocates' Director of Public Affairs.
The week I spent at UNGASS may have been the most emotionally, physically,
and mentally draining of my life. A sense of urgency surrounded everything
participants did. Emotions ran high, frustrations were apparent, and
compromise was difficult to achieve. Mai, Sean, and I, together with
other youth attending UNGASS, became oblivious to anything else.
At the preparatory meeting in May, I had been the only young person
to represent a non-governmental organization (NGO). This time, there
were about 65 young people from all over the world, including 20 youth
activists from Africa that were sponsored by the United Nations Development
Fund for Women and by the United Nations Children's Fund. Together, we
formed a youth caucus to discuss the ways in which we could make the
presence of young people felt, both at UNGASS and in the draft Declaration
of Commitment. As debate raged amongst delegates to the General Assembly
(who had not agreed upon final language for the Declaration), we worked
as a unified bloc to highlight the youth-specific dimensions of HIV/AIDS.
Our collaboration was as diverse and intense as that of the General Assembly.
Young people from official country delegations and NGOs from South Africa,
Yugoslavia, Zimbabwe, Argentina, Jamaica, and the U.S. worked late into
the night to develop consensus, a true lesson in international cooperation.
Member states were at an impasse on two major areas very important to
young people —the naming of vulnerable groups and the human rights
of women. The naming of vulnerable groups became a major issue of contention,
with the Rio Group (Latin American countries) battling for full inclusion
of all groups, such as men who have sex with men, sex workers and their
clients, and injection drugs users. However, many Islamic countries and
the Vatican objected to naming these groups. Although there were no objections
to naming 'young people' a vulnerable group, this was a critical issue
for us because young people are also included in other vulnerable populations,
such as sex workers and young men who have sex with men. Honestly acknowledging
those most at risk is one of the greatest challenges to ending the pandemic.
|

click to view
full image |
The second controversial issue for the General Assembly centered on
the empowerment of women. We found it extremely unsettling that this
was an issue. The youth caucus felt that the empowerment of women was
crucial because young girls are disproportionately infected with HIV
in the developing world due to a lack of information and a lack of control
over their own bodies.
In
the end, the youth caucus decided to create a Youth Position
Paper to address the most critical youth-related issues omitted from
the Declaration
of Commitment. Unlike the UN Declaration, the Youth Position
Paper included a list of highly vulnerable populations. The Paper focused
on issues
of youth leadership and youth empowerment; prevention, treatment,
and access to care; the socioeconomic impact of HIV/AIDS; and human rights.
The Youth Position Paper stated that young people "must be involved
in initiating, designing, and implementing programs and strategies to
fight HIV/AIDS" and that programs for youth must not be initiated,
designed, and implemented by adults alone. The United Nations may talk
about young people and HIV, but youth still do not have a voice that
reflects both the impact of the epidemic on our age group and the role
we have in determining how to reach our own generation effectively.
The Youth Position Paper is a tool young people can use to lobby for
change in governmental policies that negatively affect young people.
Even more importantly, it is a tool to mobilize our peers around the
world. The Paper is a call to action to young people to change the world
if adults do not have the courage and the conviction to do so.
Transitions (ISSN
1097-1254) © 2001, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping
young people make safe and responsible decisions about
sex. For permission
to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
Click here to view the Publications Catalog and/or
to order this publication.
|