It's midnight on Thursday in New York and it appears as though the efforts of civil society and of some progressive governments might have paid off. A substantially stronger draft Political Declaration has been produced and assuming it survives the night I suspect it will offer some hope for finishing the week with a statement that is acceptable to the maority of civil society.
Whilst it includes a reaffirmation of uivesal access commitments made at the G8 and World Summit the draft I am referring to still doesn't set any global targets for achieving universal access, such as the treatment one we have been arguing for.
However, the reiteration of the universal access goals provides an important opportunity that we can build on.
At the meeting the UN Secretary General tabled the results of the global consultation on universal access which wa run by UNAIDS. In the report he identifies six vital steps to achieving that goal: setting and supporting national AIDS priorities; providing predictable funding; adopting large scale measures to strengthen human resources for health service provision; removing barriers to affordable condoms, drugs and diagnostics; protecting and promoting the rights of vulnerable groups; and a commitment to monitoring progress on all these fronts. These recommendations represent a solid platform to take forward the global AIDS response and deserve widespread support. Combined with a set of international and national targets we will have a blue print for action on AIDS for the next five years.
A global target to ensure that by 2010, 10 million people living with HIV have access to life saving treatment - which we have been saying all along - would be a powerful demonstration of a shared global commitment to tackle the epidemic.
That very call is made in today's International Herald Tribune by the Alliance's Executive Director Alvaro Bermeo. You can read it on line at http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/06/01/opinion/edlet.php
If however, given the difficulties we experienced this week, the UN can not generate the will to convene again and agree on such a target, then - to lend a phrase - a coalition of the willing must take that lead.