Switch to an accessible version of this website which is easier to read. (requires cookies)

Jo Swinson joins with Milngavie campaigner in supporting World AIDS Day

December 2, 2005 5:08 PM
Jo Swinson with Kirsty McNeill, manager of the Stop AIDS Campaign

Jo Swinson and Kirsty McNeill have called on the G8 leaders to keep their promises on AIDS

Jo Swinson MP has joined with Kirsty McNeill, who hails from Milngavie and is Manager of the Stop AIDS Campaign, in support of World AIDS Day.

Jo, also from Milngavie, met Kirsty and fellow campaigners at an event in Parliament to mark World AIDS Day yesterday.

Commenting on the Stop AIDS Campaign, Jo said:

"It was great to meet someone from Milngavie running a high profile, highly worthwhile AIDS awareness campaign. Kirsty is setting a good example to young people in East Dunbartonshire who feel passionately about a cause and want to make a difference.

"The G8 has promised to get HIV treatment to all the men, women and children who need it by 2010. This is a great achievement for AIDS campaigners and a really important first step. Both Campaigners and MPs now need to keep up the hard work and pressure to ensure that these promises are kept."

Kirsty McNeill commented:

"I was grateful to Jo for coming along to show her support for the Stop AIDS Campaign. We need as many MPs as possible to follow Jo's example and put pressure on the Government to take action.

"With this kind of support from politicians all over the country we could achieve a rapid scale up of treatment and ensure that 2005 goes down in history as the year the world finally got to grips with the gravity of the AIDS emergency.

"Campaigners in Milngavie have done brilliant work raising the profile of HIV and wider poverty issues. They should be really proud of the role they played in persuading the Prime Minister to push for AIDS treatment for all in this year's G8. I hope they'll all keep in touch with Jo to find out about the fight to make AIDS history."

The AIDS pandemic has claimed over 3 million lives this year, including those of half a million children. Over 40 million people in some of the world poorest countries are living with this killer disease - most of them without treatment.

Deaths on this scale are equivalent to a jumbo jet crash every hour of every day of the year. In the UK, public health services can quickly provide effective anti-AIDS drugs, but for the vast majority of people in poorer countries these drugs are too expensive.

Jo recently raised the cost of anti-AIDS drugs as an issue during a Westminster debate on trade with Developing countries. As a result, the Government minister for International Development agreed to meet local fair trade supporters, and Jo hopes to use this opportunity to press for attention to be given to the cost of anti-AIDS treatment.

This World AIDS Day, Stop AIDS campaigners are calling on governments to keep their promises on AIDS treatment for all by

• Increasing funding for AIDS programmes

• Making life-saving drugs cheaper

• Investing in health services and skilled professionals so that countries can better cope with the demands of the disease

Related Links

What would you like to do next?

  • Subscribe for updates

    Read updates from this website in your desktop or online news reader

    • On a news reader website

      •  
      •  
      •  

      In a desktop news reader or a website not listed above

      •  
    • Example monthly digest email
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your email address, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you have provided to contact you from time to time about issues we think you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of some or all contacts at any time by contacting us.


    • Generate different image

    Join our email list

    • If you submit your email address, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you have provided to contact you from time to time about issues we think you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of some or all contacts at any time by contacting us.


    • Generate different image

    Follow the party's activity on...

  • Share this page

    Share this page on another website

    Link to this page

    On websites and printed material:
    joswinson.org.uk/en/article/2005/055586/jo-swinson-joins-with-milngavie-campaigner-in-supporting-world-aids-day
    In text messages, Twitter, or reading over the phone:
    js.lib.dm/a62mM

    Email this page to a friend


    • Generate different image
  • Help out or donate

    Help out in your local area

      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your email address, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you have provided to contact you from time to time about issues we think you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of some or all contacts at any time by contacting us.


    • Generate different image
  • Tell us what you think

    Send us your views

    If you are a resident of the East Dunbartonshire constituency and are writing to discuss any issue that Parliament or government is responsible for, you must provide your home address as MPs are generally only permitted to act on behalf of constituents.

    If you are not a constituent, you do not need to provide your address, but the matters we can deal with are more limited and you may wish to contact your local MP in the first instance.

    • If you choose to join our email list, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you have provided to contact you from time to time about issues we think you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of some or all contacts at any time by contacting us. You do not need to join our email list to complete this form.


    • Generate different image