This man (or shall we be frank and say, puppet), is desparate to ingratiate himself to Bush -- after tying comically to distance himself from him just before the US election.
 
This would be ok, were it not for the fact that with regards to AIDS the ONLY hope for Uganda, if not Africa, is ABC, everywhere, and at all times -- especially given the undiputed fact of sexual activity of the concerned populations. Does teen pregnancy or pre-age-18 HIV/AIDS ring a bell anywhere?
 
If Mu7 had any guts, he'd tell his master that Uganda's interests, and survival, come before dogma.
 
But, such is the life of a puppet.

Owor Kipenji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Museveni opposes condoms in schools

NO COMPROMISE: Museveni addressing the Uganda AIDS Partnership Forum yesterday

By Milton Olupot
and Josephine Maseruka

THE distribution of condoms in primary and secondary schools promotes immorality, President Yoweri Museveni has said.
�I am not in favour of distribution of condoms in primary and even secondary schools. leave them in shops so that the ones who are badly off can buy them. Let condoms be a last resort,� he said.
He was opening the third Uganda AIDS Partnership Forum yesterday at the International Conference Centre in Kampala.
He said children think the only way to have safe sex was to rely on condoms.
�I have grown up children and my policy was to frighten them out of indisciplined sex. I started talking to them from the age of 13, telling them to concentrate on their studies, that time would come for sex and that peer groups at school gave them wrong advice from bad families. Indeed, I succeeded in this,� he said.
The two-day forum on �reporting the present, preparing the future,� said Uganda�s main challenge was how to find a solution to the HIV sero-prevalence stagnation that has remained between 6% and 6.5% in the last four years.
Museveni okayed the Abstain, Be-faithful and Condoms (ABC) strategy. He, however, said sexually transmitted diseases such as HPV and herpes genitalisis spread even with condoms.
�I am told Ngabo is not good, it breaks. That is another crisis. I don�t know who approved that type. it breaks and kills people. Whoever allowed the importation of that condom into Uganda is a killer. Maybe that is why the prevalence rate has stagnated because people believed in the safety of such condoms and found they break.
�There must be a limit to condoms, but for sure if they are well manufactured they can control AIDS,� he said. The Forum attracted all stakeholders in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Museveni thanked American President George Bush, The Global Fund, the World Bank and other donors for their contribution towards Uganda�s fight against t he scourge.
He said the Uganda AIDS Commission (UAC) should coordinate the funds to minimise squandering.
He also attributed the stagnated AIDS prevalence to lack of knowledge among the masses. instead of educating the people, FM radios and newspapers are abusing the Government.
�The decline these people are talking about was because I went around preaching in every county. that is why there was a dramatic fall. So you are harvesting what you sowed,� he said.
He called for the provision of anti-retroviral drugs.
�It is as if there are no other problems in Uganda and it is only political power. Most of the time is wasted on political greed. You are lucky that the prevalence stagnated. it could have gone up. UAC should direct these radio stations to spread the messages and if they don�t want we shall tell the Broadcasting Council to stop them because they are not useful,� he said.
He said he was considering how to do it legally. �If there is no law it shou ld be done. the MPs are here. Radio stations must be directed that this is what you should broadcast,� Museveni said. He said churches and mosques were not doing much.
Museveni called on the Ministry of Health to train ordinary people in professional fields, to reduce the burden on its workers.
�I trained ordinary people to defeat a professional army. I went to Luweero and found people in rags and trained them to defeat people trained from Soviet Union and other military academies,� he said.
UAC Director General Kihumuro Apuuli said the challenge now was complacency and persistent risk behaviour.

Published on: Tuesday, 30th November, 2004

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