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Focus: HIV and AIDS

In her role as Special Representative for UNAIDS (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) Her Royal Highness The Crown Princess has worked for many years to strengthen youth leadership in the AIDS effort.

Children and young people are the segments of the population most vulnerable to the AIDS epidemic. For this reason Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s primary focus has been on securing youth leadership in the effort to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and to combat prejudice. The Crown Princess has participated actively in efforts to ensure that those who are most severely affected by the epidemic – young people and people with HIV – are able to influence decision-making and strategy processes in AIDS-related activities. 

Young Leaders Summit in Oslo

In June 2009 the Crown Princess invited 30 young leaders from all over the world to the Young Leaders Summit II at Losby Manor outside Oslo to work on specific recommendations for future AIDS efforts. Established leaders from various sectors also participated at the summit as mentors and discussion partners.

Crown Princess Mette-Marit hosted the three-day summit together with the Norwegian Minister of the Environment and International Development and UNAIDS. 

Special Representative for UNAIDS

Crown Princess Mette-Marit was appointed Special Representative for UNAIDS (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) in 2006. In this capacity she has travelled to Nicaragua, Ukraine and Mali on AIDS-related visits.

She has also led delegations to the International AIDS Conference, the world’s largest health conference, which is held every two years, and involves the participation of some 20 000 delegates from all over the world. The Crown Princess participated for the first time in 2006, when the conference was held in Toronto, and has subsequently attended the conferences in Vienna and Washington, D.C.

The Crown Princess has an extensive international network in the HIV/AIDS sphere, and has assisted UNAIDS in its strategic activities to involve local youth organisations around the world in combatting the spread of the epidemic.

In June 2011 the Crown Princess attended the UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting on AIDS, together with the then Minister of the Environment and International Development Erik Solheim. The meeting marked 30 years of HIV/AIDS response. It followed up declarations adopted at prior meetings in 2001 and 2006 by adopting a declaration that sets out specific targets for HIV/AIDS-related work through 2015: sexual transmission of HIV reduced by half, transmission of HIV among people who inject drugs reduced by half, mother-to-child transmission eliminated, and 15 million people on antiretroviral treatment by the end of 2015.

Studies and voluntary work

The Crown Princess’s involvement in AIDS-related work started when the Crown Prince and Crown Princess set up their Humanitarian Fund in 2001. Later the same year, the Norwegian Red Cross received a grant from the Humanitarian Fund for their efforts to prevent HIV/AIDS in Mozambique.

In 2003 the Crown Princess completed a course of study at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London in which HIV/AIDS and Development was one of four courses undertaken. After completing her studies in England she spent three months as an observer at the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) where she focused on HIV and AIDS-related issues.

Crown Princess Mette-Marit herself describes her meetings with mothers and children affected by HIV and AIDS in Malawi in 2005 as a personal turning point. After the visit she felt a strong obligation to continue to work in the area of HIV/AIDS.

For several years the Crown Princess has also been involved as a volunteer at AKSEPT, the Church City Mission’s centre for people affected by HIV/AIDS. She has participated in various activities at the centre and has been actively involved in the annual celebration of World AIDS Day on 1 December.

 

14.11.2012

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Crown Princess Mette-Marit speaks to Chinese Television - CCTV reporter and UNAIDS ambassador James Chau in Washington D.C. (Photo: CCTV)