Eighty-six percent of HIV-positive people in the Democratic Republic of Congo have no access to anti-retrovirals, medical charity Doctors Without Borders said Wednesday.
"The conditions of access to care for people living with HIV/AIDS in the Democratic Republic of Congo are catastrophic," the Belgian wing of Swiss-based Medecins Sans Frontieres, Doctors without Borders or MSF said in a statement.
Of the former Belgian colony's 68 million people, more than one million are carrying the virus that can lead to AIDS. MSF said 350,000 of them should be getting drug therapy but last year, only 44,000, about 14 percent, were.
In sub-Saharan Africa, about 49 percent of people living with HIV can get anti-retroviral treatment, the group said.
MSF added that only one percent of pregnant women with HIV were getting ARV treatment.
The problem is exacerbated with many Congolese expected to pay for treatment, even though two-thirds of the population lives on $1.25 (96 euro cents) a day.
International donors are giving less money to the HIV fight, MSF noted, with the global financial crisis squeezing aid budgets. - ANP/AFP
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