[Title 3 CFR 7153]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - January 1, 1999 Edition]
[Title 3 - Presidential Documents]
[Proclamation 7153 - Proclamation 7153 of December 1, 1998]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office]
3Presidential Documents11999-01-011999-01-01falseProclamation 7153 of December 1, 19987153Proclamation 7153Presidential Documents
Proclamation 7153 of December 1, 1998
World AIDS Day, 1998
By the President of the United States of America
A Proclamation
On World AIDS Day, we are heartened by the knowledge that our
unprecedented investments in AIDS research have resulted in new
treatments that are prolonging the lives of many people living with the
disease. Thousands of scientists, health care professionals, and
patients themselves have joined together to advance our understanding of
HIV and AIDS and improve treatment options. Because of the heroic
efforts of these people, fewer and fewer Americans are losing their
lives to AIDS, and for that we are immensely thankful.
But the AIDS epidemic is far from over. Within racial and ethnic
minority communities, HIV and AIDS are a severe and ongoing crisis.
While the number of deaths in our country attributed to AIDS has
declined for 2 consecutive years, AIDS remains the leading killer of
African American men aged 25-44 and the second leading killer of African
American women in the same age group. African Americans, who comprise
only 13 percent of the U.S. population, accounted for 43 percent of new
AIDS cases in 1997 and 36 percent of all AIDS cases. Hispanic Americans
represent just 10 percent of our population, but they account for more
than 20 percent of new AIDS cases; and AIDS is also becoming a critical
concern to Native American and Asian American communities. Young people
of every racial and ethnic community are also disproportionately
impacted by AIDS, both in the number of new AIDS cases and in the number
of new HIV infections. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention estimate that approximately half of all new HIV infections in
the United States occur in people under age 25 and that one-quarter
occur in people under age 22.
Across the world, the situation is even more grim. As with other
epidemics before it, AIDS hits hardest in areas where knowledge about
the disease is scarce and poverty is high. Of the nearly 6 million
people newly infected with HIV each year, more than 90 percent live in
the poorest nations of the world. Entire communities are threatened by
this epidemic, and the growing number of children who will lose parents
to AIDS will have a devastating impact on these societies. By the year
2010, there may be as many as 40 million children who will have been
orphaned by AIDS, and developing nations will have to struggle to deal
with the overwhelming needs of a generation of young people left without
parents.
This year's World AIDS Day theme, ``Be A Force For Change,'' is a
reminder that each of us has a role to play in bringing the AIDS
epidemic to an end. Our response must be comprehensive and ongoing. It
must also be a collaborative one, bringing together governments and
communities in a shared effort to expand prevention efforts, raise
awareness among young
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people of the risks of HIV infection and how to avoid it, increase
access to lifesaving therapies, and ensure that those who are living
with HIV and AIDS receive the care and services they need.
Developing a vaccine for HIV is perhaps our best hope of eradicating
this terrible disease and stemming the tide of pain and desolation it
has wrought. The global community has joined together in making the
development of an HIV vaccine a top international priority. Within the
next decade, we hope to have the means to stop this deadly virus, but
until we reach that day we must remain strong in our crusade to prevent
the spread of HIV and AIDS and to care for those living with the
disease. In this way we can best honor the memory of the many loved ones
we have lost to AIDS.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, WILLIAM J. CLINTON, President of the United States of
America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and
laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim December 1, 1998, as World
AIDS Day. I invite the Governors of the States, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, officials of the other territories subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States, and the American people to join me in
reaffirming our commitment to defeating HIV and AIDS. I encourage every
American to participate in appropriate commemorative programs and
ceremonies in workplaces, houses of worship, and other community centers
and to reach out to protect and educate our children and to help and
comfort all people who are living with HIV and AIDS.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this first day of
December, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and ninety-eight, and
of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and
twenty-third.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON