The total population of North and South Africa will be around 6,2 percent of the world. However, 50 percent of all HIV-infected people in Africa are on the African continent. South Africa's young activist Mohammed Bari is trying to give a voice to AIDS-affected youth in a country on such a continent. Youth
Service America (YSA) has published the names of 25 influential young
people and the stories of each of them Huffington Post There was also the name Bari on this list of 25 people. In the Huffington Post, a part of the story of Mohammad Bari was published:
Hello, I am Mohammad Bari and I am 20 years old. I have been sentenced to death for an offense, which I did not do. This is my story.
Away from the racket, when I entered the door of AIDS Ward, I came to my nose at first and then smelled a smell. Then I heard the sound of groaning. I saw some people in pale face looking at me, their eyes shining. Keeping the pile around the drug, and keeping the patients so far away that no one will be able to hear them crying. I remember that day very clearly, even though it was 10 years ago in Gambia. Nearly 90 million people in the world are still fighting the same kind of fight against life and AIDS. They are young people, old men, women, men, children and adolescents all over the world - everyone sitting in the same boat waiting for the ART (antiretroviral therapy).
When will that day, the day they get HIV drugs, the day they live, from this plague, the day they are released, from all the troubles and troubles caused by HIV and AIDS. We blame the government for most of the time, but seeing all this, there is a question about the existence of humanism and justice. Each group should stand against their leaders and ask for the answer to the question of what they are doing with the lives of the people, especially those who are AIDS patients. That is why I am very disappointed by how worrying about future will be, when half of the children born to HIV in this developing world will leave the world before their two-year birthday is over. Drug companies are worried about their rights, they have stuck mass production of medicines, and rich countries have become copyright laws. As a result, cheaper, less toxic, and the ability of everyone to make drugs has become difficult. It is frustrating that the political parties spend lakhs of money every day on festival occasions where people of the country are being killed every day by AIDS.
Maybe I'm just wondering why so much behind HIV treatment. As I said in an open letter to the leaders of the Gambia in my country before November 24, HIV treatment can be divided into groups, resurrect the hope, bring a solidarity, draw attention to the economic interests of any group, reduce healthcare burden and newer By reducing the possibility of infection. That is why I am saying this again and again. Because of my personal experience, I favor open treatment for everyone in the world. With the help of treatment, a new generation of complete aids can be developed. But it will be possible only when we will not allow people around us to die of AIDS.