Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  China AIDS activist feels failure despite award
Last updated: 2007-03-13


China AIDS activist feels failure despite award
2007-03-13

Nations
China
People
Hillary Clinton
Hu Jintao
Event
Henan AIDS Crisis
Poised to receive an award for fighting HIV/AIDS in rural China, Chinese activist Gao Yaojie said she feels like a failure.

Eighty years old, her face creased with wrinkles, Gao has spent the last decade of her life working to treat the sick, to slow the disease's spread and to expose official complicity in its dispersal in her home province of Henan in central China.

Thousands of poor farmers have become infected with the disease after selling their blood in the 1990s at unsanitary, often state-run clinics, making the province the center of China's AIDS epidemic.

Having handed out thousands of AIDS prevention pamphlets to passengers at bus depots, prostitutes in nightclubs and peasants in the countryside, the retired gynecologist said she felt she had not done enough.

"I constantly think that I am a failure because I have been at this work for more than 10 years and yet AIDS is still rampant," the doctor said in an interview on Monday in Washington, where she is to receive a "global leadership" award on Wednesday from Vital Voices, a nonprofit that recognizes women leaders.

That Gao came to Washington at all was something of a feat given that local Henan officials put her under house arrest for two weeks in February to prevent her from traveling.

They relented in the face of an international outcry, including a letter from Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, a New York Democrat and U.S. presidential candidate, to Chinese President Hu Jintao and Vice Premier Wu Yi urging them to intervene on her behalf.

"SOME SHAME"

Asked why the Henan authorities did not want her to travel, Gao chuckled and said: "Oh, that's really hard for me to say ... I have a feeling that my various criticisms have caused them some shame."

No senior official has been prosecuted or publicly punished for the blood-selling scandal in Henan, where such practices have now been banned.

"They are indifferent to the life and death of ordinary people and care only about their power, position and salaries and the country's reputation," she said of the local officials, while crediting the Beijing authorities with her release.

Her harshest words, however, were reserved for people who make money off the disease by pretending to have found a cure.

"What is more frightening are these charlatans who are peddling cures," she said, grimacing. "There have been people who have said they have family remedies that go back eight generations but of course AIDS has only been with us about 20 years. "

The doctor, whose feet were bound as a child according Chinese custom but were encased in black espadrilles on Monday, has seen the convulsions of Chinese history. She was purged and attempted suicide during the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution.

Gao said she hoped to write two more books, one about her work since 1996 to fight AIDS and the other to give voice to AIDS patients.

"I want my readers to understand the truth about AIDS patients who are innocent but who endure miserable lives and especially children, who die before even before knowing what life is," she said.

She then spoke of a couple who contracted the disease from selling blood.

"The husband died and the wife hung herself from the ceiling. Her small child found the mother hanging and grabbed her feet and pulled her (saying) 'Come down, mother. Come down," she said, speaking in a child's soft voice and clawing at her own legs. "But the woman was already swinging, stiff and dead."

 Henan AIDS Crisis  
  Profile3 News19Gallery1Links  
  Envoy: China makes strides in AIDS fight (2007-07-18)
  Filmmaker: Beijing more open about AIDS (2007-03-25)
  China AIDS activist feels failure despite award (2007-03-13)
  Freed China AIDS activist off to U.S (2007-02-26)
  China lets AIDS doctor collect U.S. rights prize (2007-02-16)
  China police ban hemophilia forum: source (2006-11-26)
  China shuts down blood dealers to curb AIDS spread (2005-03-25)
  China surveys AIDS in blood-sale scandal province (2004-09-11)
  China gets $32 mln to fight AIDS after blood scandal (2004-08-19)
  2 Henan Villagers Arrested in AIDS March (2004-08-01)
  China offers aid to AIDS-hit Henan orphans (2004-04-10)
  China blood donor AIDS victims turn to suicide (2004-03-12)
  China sends officials to villages to fight AIDS (2004-02-16)
  Group Seeks China Health Official Release (2003-10-07)
  China farmers wanting hospital say beaten by police (2003-07-05)
  Hundreds of police storm 'AIDS village' in China (2003-07-04)
  AIDS Activist No Longer Harassed (2001-08-24)
  Reported AIDS Cases in China Climb (2001-08-23)
  Doctor fighting for Chinese AIDS victims won humanitarian award (2001-05-29)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


[2009 Tiger Woods Accident]: Sick mother-in-law adds twist to Woods saga (21:44 12/8)


[2009 White House Party-crasher]: Gate-crashers to take the Fifth if subpoenaed (21:44 12/8)


[111th Congress]: McChrystal backs Afghan plan to skeptical Congress (21:44 12/8)

[Afghan Terror War]: McChrystal backs Afghan plan to skeptical Congress (21:44 12/8)

[Second Gulf War]: Wave of coordinated attacks in Iraq kills 127 (21:44 12/8)


[2009 US Health Reform]: Dems reach deal to drop gov't-run plan (21:44 12/8)

[Oscar Awards]: Hollywood counters reality with decade of escapism (21:44 12/8)


[2009 Swine Flu]: Swine flu damage reaches deep into lungs: study (21:44 12/8)


[2008 U.S. Financial Rescue]: US to sell JPMorgan Chase warrants (21:44 12/8)

[Global Financial Crisis]: GE Capital outlook improving, losses to continue (21:44 12/8)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.