Africa
Stop AIDS and Free Africa!
The immune deficiency disease AIDS is the biggest health crisis of our time. This epidemic is being promoted by the pharmaceutical multinationals that depend on the continuation and expansion of this disease as a multibillion dollar marketplace for their patented anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs).
Pharmaceutical colonialism in Africa and other developing regions of the world has strategically replaced the colonialism of earlier decades. Pharmaceutical colonialism, however, is particularly insidious because it lacks all visible characteristics of brutal colonialism. To the contrary, pharmaceutical colonialism is being deceptively presented to millions of people in Africa and the developing world under the mask of charity and disguised as humanism.
Under a "Samaritan" cover, pharmaceutical colonialism has developed into one of the most deadly forms of colonialism ever: the cost in human lives has reached genocidal proportions and the economies of entire continents are being kept in shackles.
Pharmaceutical colonialism today is one of the most important strategic tools used by the former colonial powers to maintain the economic dependency of their former colonies and to cement economic injustice and dependency between the developing and industrialized world.
This is the reason why the pharmaceutical multinationals and their stakeholders in the media, medicine and politics are currently fighting not only the liberation from the AIDS epidemic, but also the liberation of the nations of Africa and the developing world from economic dependencies.
In their fight to maintain pharmaceutical colonialism and economic dependency, these interest groups have two main enemies: first, nutritional medicine and other science-based, non-patentable natural health approaches that help control AIDS and other epidemics with natural means and second, all those who expose the fraudulent nature of the pharmaceutical "business with disease."
At the same time, the termination of the AIDS epidemic and the termination of the economic dependency of the developing world has one common pre-condition: the exposure and termination of the multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical fraud business with AIDS and other epidemics and its replacement by effective, non-patentable, natural health approaches.
What is needed now is a global movement with the goals of bringing to an end all forms of pharmaceutical colonialism and the building of a new global health care system that is based on effective and affordable natural health. This movement, liberating mankind from the shackles of the pharma-cartel, will become the largest liberation movement of all time. It will be carried by and exclusively serve the health interests of millions of people - and no longer the financial interests of the drug cartel.
The African Alliance for Health Peace and Social Justice is part of such a global movement uniting peoples of all nations, cultures, races and creeds. Its members come from both rich and poor countries, from North, South, East and West and are united in their desire to create a world of health, peace and social justice.
In countries where progressive governments - such as the government of South Africa - are working towards the establishment of just democracies, our work supports these governments. Where this is not the case, we campaign for changes.
The greatest obstacles to attaining these goals and enshrining them as fundamental human rights are vested company interest groups that regard the planet as their property and us, the inhabitants, as their market place.
The globalisation of company groups and the expanding dominion of their financial interests directly affect and endanger the lives of all people on our planet:
- The global right to health. Millions of people throughout the world die of diseases that might long since have been eradicated. This happens for one reason only: such illnesses serve as markets for the pharmaceutical investment industry. We will not rest until health is a global human right!
- The global right to social justice. Hundreds of millions of people in Africa and other developing regions live in inhumane conditions of hunger, malnutrition and illiteracy. All this misery has a common cause: the unjust distribution of our planet's wealth and resources. We will not rest until the right to a dignified life has become a right for all people of the world.
- The global right to peace. The whole of humanity is increasingly under threat from crises and wars that arise chiefly from the greed and interests of multinational groups. In order to cement the unjust distribution of wealth and to secure their huge revenues from it, these global interests are even deliberately promoting these crises. We will not rest until we and our children live in a world of lasting peace.
We, the people, have grown aware that it is not by chance that fundamental human rights to health, peace and social justice are not yet enjoyed by all our planet's inhabitants. We have also realised that if we, our children and grandchildren wish to live in such a world, we must take responsibility for it - now.