Following her inspiring appearance at the 2009 Festival, Annie Lennox will be returning this year to provide an update on the progress of her SING campaign which is fighting HIV/AIDS in Southern Africa. By way of a preview to her forthcoming event, we spoke to Annie about some of the key issues and achievements she has experienced in her campaign work during the last 12 months.
Festival of Politics (FoP): It’s been nearly a year since you attended the Festival of Politics to talk about the SING Campaign. How have things been going with the campaign since then?
Annie Lennox (AL): Here’s a run down of some of the things that happened over the year…
October 2009 – I was awarded the Save the Children Los Niños Award in Madrid, for continued humanitarian work; The Economist Conferences announced its support for the SING Campaign.
November 2009 – I was presented with the Women of Peace award at the Nobel Peace Laureates in Berlin.
December 2009 – The SING Campaign’s second anniversary; SING EBay Auction raised £7000; I was awarded the Freedom of the City of London.
March 2010 - I attended a Buckingham Palace reception and was able to address the Queen and speak about the SING Campaign; I attended the UNAIDS Conference in New York; I joined International Development Minister Gareth Thomas, and leaders representing the Global HIV community at an emergency Westminster summit; Took part in the Women for Women March; Gave an interview for Hard Talk at Portmeirion; Visited South Africa, performed with Sir Elton John, and opened the new Vrygrond community centre near Cape Town.
April 2010 – Performed for Idol Gives Back.
May 2010 – I was announced as HIV and AIDS special envoy to The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association – Scotland Branch.
June 2010 – I was appointed UNAIDS Goodwill Ambassador ; Attended the GBC and Women Deliver Conference in Washington; Took part in the launch of the Body Shop HIV/Aids Campaign.
July 2010 – Spoke and performed at the TED Global conference in Oxford; Took part in the AIDS 2010 CONFERENCE in Vienna.
FoP: You’ve recently visited South Africa again to see how the work of SING and the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) is progressing. There seems to be some very positive results, as can be seen from the video you posted on the SING website showing the considerable improvement in the lives of the four brothers who were orphaned as a result of AIDS.
AL: The most significant development is that the South African government is finally responding appropriately to the situation. Since the launch of the National Strategic plan in April of this year, they are scaling up their response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. They aim to halve infection rates, and double levels of treatment, and seem to be very committed to making a real difference, although the challenges are enormous. The South African Deputy President, Kgalema Motlanthe, and the Health Minister, Aaron Motsaledi, both attended this year’s International AIDS Conference recently, and what they said was enormously encouraging.
With regards to the boys, TAC members in their area are visiting them regularly and are monitoring their progress, which is reported to be very good. They have access to a supportive grant and are all attending school. The situation with so called “child headed households” all over Sub Saharan Africa is really dire however, which is one of the reasons I campaign for HIV positive pregnant women to receive access to medical intervention, so that they can have anti-retroviral treatment to keep them alive, and their babies have a very good chance of being born free of the virus.
FoP: The SING Campaign is obviously making a difference, but there is still work to be done, particularly in relation to the stigma associated with HIV/AIDS. Another recent video posted on the SING site told the awful story of a woman who took her own life and those of her youngest children, as a result of being persecuted by members of her community who thought she had AIDS. How widespread is this form of prejudice in South Africa, and what can be done to address it?
AL: Stigma isn’t only prevalent in South Africa, stigma is EVERYWHERE… including Scotland, or even possibly in you, dear reader!
People are afraid of HIV/AIDS. The issue is loaded with misleading myths and misnomers. Fundamentally we need decent education, so that people understand clearly how the virus is passed on, and how it’s not. It needs to come out of the closet, and be demystified, and understood, just like any other virus.
FoP: You’ve recently been made a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Programme on AIDS, and a Special Envoy for the Scottish Branch of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association. Congratulations! How might these new roles influence your work in relation to HIV/AIDS?
AL: Becoming a UNAIDS Goodwill Ambassador recently has strengthened and broadened my platform. Michel Sidibe, the director of UNAIDS is a real visionary, who has a very clear and innovative directive as to how he wants to lead the response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic (especially with regard to women and children) and has made it an objective to have zero mother to child transmission of the virus by 2015. I’ll be going to the UN in New York in September to take part in a high level conference, drawing together the major players from around the world. The dialogues that arise from these events will hopefully lead to decision making policies which should have a real long term impact. We want the millennium development goals to be reached, and as an advocate, I have the opportunity to send out the right messages to influence those who have the power to make the changes that are so desperately needed to save millions of people’s lives.
I am very much looking forward to working with the Scottish Parliament in my new role as a special envoy to the Scottish Branch of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA). This will allow me to regularly update Members of the Scottish Parliament on developments in the fight against HIV/AIDS, particularly with regard to women and children.
FoP : We’re delighted that you’re returning to the Festival of Politics this year, to update us on the SING Campaign. This year your event will also form part of the General Teaching Council (GTC) for Scotland lecture series. Teachers and educators obviously have a vital role to play in the fight against HIV/AIDS – how do you think we can help support their work in this area?
AL: First of all, I hope I can inspire people to take an interest in something that they might not have given much thought to before. That’s the first step!
I cannot tell you that I have a prescriptive stratagem, but I do think it begins with dialogue. I believe that people have to think for themselves as to how they might like to explore the issue further, and how they can personally become engaged. I do think however, that there needs to be a place for HIV/AIDS with regards to sex education in every school.
In this way, we can educate young people to be more aware, and understand it better, as well as helping to de-mythologize and de-stigmatize at the same time.
For more information on the SING Campaign, please visit www.annielennoxsing.com
Annie Lennox will be appearing at two Festival of Politics events – Annie Lennox and The SING Campaign – One Year On (Thursday 19 August), and Power of the People (Wednesday 18 August), where she will form part of a panel – also including former journalist and MP Martin Bell, and campaigner and comedian Mark Thomas – which will consider how people who are not “professional” politicians can change the political landscape.
For full details of Annie’s events, please visit the Festival website – www.festivalofpolitics.org.uk. Annie’s events will be webcast live on www.holyrood.tv