Former US president Jimmy Carter has said he once
almost punched former South African president Thabo Mbeki during
a heated argument of the latter’s lack of an HIV/Aids treatment plan.
According to the Sunday Times, Carter, who attended a meeting of the Elders in South Africa last week, told the newspaper that it was the closest he had ever come to punching a head of state. He said the row was over Mbeki, and then minister of health Manto Tshabalala-Msimang’s refusal to let Aids be treated at the time.
Former president Thabo Mbeki famously denied the link between HIV and Aids. In 1999, Mbeki claimed that AZT - the most suitable ARV at the time - was toxic and refused to make treatment available despite offers of UN aid.
In 2000, Tshabalala-Msimang rejected the offer of free Nevirapine from its German manufacturer, despite the drug being cleared by the US's Food and Drug Administration and the WHO.
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