Public Service Announcements free to broadcasters
Bridgetown, Barbados -- March 6, 2007 -- The International Cricket Council (ICC)
will team up with UNAIDS, UNICEF and the Caribbean Broadcast Media
Partnership on HIV/AIDS at the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 to highlight
the situation of children and young people living with and affected by
HIV.
More than two billion television viewers are expected to
tune in to the seven week long ICC Cricket World Cup 2007, which begins
with an Opening Ceremony on 11 March in Jamaica. Activities at the
event will draw attention to the issues facing children and young
people affected by HIV and highlight the resources and actions required
to address them. The public, especially young people aged 15-24, will
get information on the stigma and discrimination around HIV and on how
to protect themselves against the virus. The partnership is part of the
ICC’s commitment to promoting the Spirit of Cricket and its positive
impact on society.
“The Spirit of Cricket is a special part of
our game and is a concept that stretches beyond the boundaries of the
outfield,” said ICC President Percy Sonn. “We hope the range of
activities delivered at the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 will make a
difference to raising awareness and reducing stigma around HIV in the
Caribbean and across the ever-growing cricket world. By encouraging
high profile players to support this campaign, we hope to be able to
engage those who may otherwise be difficult to reach.”
Through
high profile activities around cricket’s biggest event, the ICC will
support the Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS campaign launched in
2005 by UNICEF, UNAIDS and other partners.
A series of PSAs have
been produced, each lasting 30 seconds, which will be available to
broadcasters free of charge. The PSAs feature leading players,
including Ricky Ponting from Australia and Rahul Dravid from India,
speaking about how HIV affects children.
Players and officials
from each team will wear the red and blue ribbon of the Unite for
Children, Unite against AIDS campaign during their first games and
during the final. Players will also visit programmes supporting
children and young people affected by HIV.
“Young people today
have never known a world without AIDS. Sports stars – such as top
cricket players – can act as role models for today’s young generation
and reach out to them on AIDS issues,” said UNAIDS Executive Director
Dr. Peter Piot. “Sport is a force for change that can break down
barriers, build self-esteem and teach life skills and social behaviour.
By highlighting AIDS issues, the ICC Cricket World Cup and its
cricketing stars are showing exactly the kind of exceptional response
needed for the exceptional challenge of AIDS.”
The Unite for
Children, Unite Against Aids campaign promotes four key areas:
prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV, the virus that
causes AIDS; increased access to antiretroviral therapy for children
and young people who need treatment; education programmes to help
prevent HIV transmission; and increased support for children who are
orphaned and left vulnerable by AIDS.
"Children have been the
missing face of the AIDS pandemic," said UNICEF Executive Director Ann
M. Veneman. "The International Cricket Council will be a powerful ally
in ensuring that children are at the heart of the global response to
the epidemic."
The ICC is also being supported in this effort by
the Caribbean Broadcast Media Partnership on HIV/AIDS (CBMP), a
coalition of over 50 broadcasters in 23 Caribbean countries and
territories. The CBMP’s new regional media campaign, LIVE UP, aims to
inspire the people of the Caribbean, especially youth, to consider what
they can do to stem the spread of HIV.
"The exceptional reach of
broadcast media in the Caribbean gives us a unique opportunity to
educate audiences about how to avoid HIV, and how to combat the stigma
and discrimination that surround the disease," noted CBMP Steering
Committee Chair Allyson Leacock. "By doing what we do best,
communicating with our neighbors, members of the CBMP are helping our
audience to remain healthy and well-informed, while we all work
together to reduce the impact of HIV in our region."
The CBMP is
producing a series of televised public services announcements (PSAs),
as part of an ongoing media campaign, targeted to young people. This
will be debuted by Caribbean broadcasters during the event. The spots
encourage young people to take action to prevent HIV infection,
including talking openly with parents, teachers and friends about HIV,
being informed, using protection and getting tested. Viewers will be
encouraged to visit a new website, (www.iliveup.com), providing
information, local resources and the stories of young people affected
by HIV.
Cricket is popular in many of the countries that are
most impacted by AIDS, including India and South Africa. Together,
these two countries are home to around 11 million of the 40 million
people estimated to be living with HIV.
In the Caribbean, where
the ICC Cricket World Cup is being held, UNAIDS estimated that 250,000
people were living with HIV in 2006, 15,000 of which were children aged
0-14 years. It was also estimated that in 2006, 1.1% of young women and
0.5% of young men aged 15-24 were living with HIV in the Caribbean and
that around 27,000 people became newly infected with the virus in 2006
alone.
Cricket is also a major sport in many donor countries
that are active in the global AIDS response, including Australia,
Canada, England, the Netherlands and New Zealand – all competitors in
the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007.
Source: cricketworldcup.com