Source: IRIN
AIDS activists have welcomed a pledge by US President Barack Obama to  provide antiretroviral treatment to some six million people globally by  2013, an increase of two million on the previous target. 
"Obama has shown political will and leadership in doubling the pace  of treatment initiation... he has made a down-payment on ending the AIDS  crisis globally," said Asia Russell, director of international policy  at the health advocacy NGO, Health Global Access Project (Health GAP),  which has been urging the US to take the lead in the global fight against HIV/AIDS. 
 
 In 2010, some 3.2 million people were accessing ARVs through the US  President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR); globally, some 6.6  million people have access to HIV treatment out of an estimated 15  million who need it. 
 
 The pledge, however, does not come with an increase in PEPFAR funding from the US$48 billion pledged in 2008 for five years. 
 
 "We are looking at smarter programming and greater efficiencies, and  costs are also coming down," said Michael Strong, country coordinator  for PEPFAR in Uganda. "We will continue existing programmes and increase  the number of people on ARVs to six million." 
 
 Strong noted that the US was also working to persuade other  countries to take greater responsibility in the fight against HIV.  "China, for instance, should not be a recipient of donor funds for HIV -  it is the world's second-largest economy," he said. "We are urging rich  countries like Germany and Sweden to commit fully to efforts to fight  AIDS." 
 
 Obama said the US would also provide ARVs to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission to 1.5 million women, support 4.7 million male circumcisions in eastern and southern Africa, and fund the distribution of at least one billion male condoms. 
 
 "HPTN 052 [a large randomized controlled study that showed the effectiveness of  ARVs as prevention] showed that treatment not only saves lives, but  slashes rates of infection; Obama has shown that he is willing to take  action on the basis of that science," Russell added. 
 
 The news comes as a relief for those involved in the fight against  HIV, which is severely underfunded and recently suffered an additional  blow when the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was  forced to cancel its 11th round of funding due to insufficient  resources. Activists have called on donor countries to follow Obama's  lead in ensuring treatment is made available for all those in need. 
 
 "We are calling for an emergency donor conference within the next  200 days as an opportunity for donors to raise at least US$2 billion  towards meeting the costs of treatment," said Tido von Schoen-Angerer,  executive director of the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Access  Campaign. "It is very frustrating that we have had such a year of  scientific achievement in terms of understanding how to have real impact  and possibly end the epidemic, but at the same time funding is running  out and we risk going backwards in the fight against HIV." 
 
 Cautious optimism 
 
 Obama's announcement on 1 December, World AIDS Day, was welcomed  with cautious optimism in developing countries. "If the pledge is kept,  it will be an important step in the global goal of getting 15 million  people on treatment by 2015, but it is important to realize that we are  not out of the woods yet, unless the rich countries of the north keep  their pledges to the Global Fund... because this is the biggest source  of funding for many poor countries," said Nelson Otuoma, national  coordinator of the Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Kenya  (NEPHAK). 
 
 Health GAP's Russell cautioned that high-burden countries would need  to play their part in ensuring donor funds were used in the most  effective way; in particular, countries such as Uganda - the only  PEPFAR-funded country where new HIV infections are on the rise - would  need to become more aggressive in using effective prevention  technologies and scaled-up treatment programmes to show results. 
 
 "It will be vital for high-burden countries to step up and match  Obama's commitment with money, leadership and accountability," she said.