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The Elton John AIDS Foundation (EJAF), an international leader in the global fight to end AIDS, and the International AIDS Conference (IAC) has announced that Sir Elton John and Prince Harry will host a youth-focused special session at the 2016 International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa.

The session will address the HIV epidemic among adolescents with a particular emphasis on the impact stigma and discrimination have on youth. Sir Elton and Prince Harry will be joined by Prince Seeiso of Lesotho and a panel of young advocates who will describe what is and what is not working for the HIV response among young people, and what must change to truly address the needs of youth with HIV. EJAF will also announce the first recipient of The LGBT Fund, a $10 million partnership with the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

“Today, HIV/AIDS is a treatable disease and no longer the death sentence it was ten years ago, but we cannot grow complacent in our fight to eradicate it completely. If our efforts wane, anti-viral drug resistance will resurface, transmission rates will again rise, and this disease, which knows no boundaries, will once again become a ruthless pandemic with disastrous and far-reaching consequences,” said Sir Elton. “Many LGBT people and youth around the world still don’t have access to life-saving treatment and face high cases of stigma and discrimination. I look forward to working with Prince Harry and other world leaders to help make our dream of an AIDS-free world a reality.”

Responding to the AIDS crisis in Africa has been a key priority for the Foundation and has focused primarily on youth and LGBT people.

EJAF and PEPFAR will also host a press conference on Wednesday, July 20th to formally announce the first grantee of their joint LGBT Fund. This fund, launched in 2015, will support non-governmental organizations in multiple countries in sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean, and will provide information and services to the LGBT community. In many countries, LBGT people face far higher rates of HIV infection and have significantly lower access to HIV services, often because of stigma and discrimination. The announcement of the inaugural recipient also comes one year after Sir Elton’s historic testimony before the U.S. Foreign Operations Appropriations Committee.

“We are proud to partner with PEPFAR for the joint LGBT Fund to increase our support for Africa’s LGBT community,” said EJAF Chairman David Furnish. “Today, an estimated 19 million of the 35 million people living with HIV worldwide do not even know they have the virus. Approximately 68 percent of new infections are in sub-Saharan Africa. International support in the global fight to eradicate HIV/AIDS is crucial as millions of people around the world still lack access to life-saving prevention, care and treatment.”

Since 1992, the Elton John AIDS Foundation has raised more than $350 million to combat stigma, prevent infections, provide treatment and services, and motivate governments to end AIDS.

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