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提问人:网友bignetcat 发布时间:2022-01-07
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Aids in South Africa is threatening to become a problem. At the end of 1993, 4.25% of Sout

h African adults were HIV positive. By the end of 1994, the figure was 7.57%.

This increase in a year is the largest for the spread of the virus in Africa and possibly the world, and it seems certain that 12% or more of the population will be HIV positive by Christmas.

In the worst hit area, the HIV positive rate now tops 20%. It seems South Africa is moving rapidly towards the catastrophic 35% levels of infection in East Africa. This will be the first time that the virus will have become so widespread in a sophisticated, industrialized country.

Both the present and preceding governments should bear responsibility; each was aware of the crisis and did almost nothing. There is no public campaign to promote safe sex, for example. The apartheid regime was too conscious of religious sensitivities to organize an explicit anti-Aids campaign, and the African National Congress is far too nervous about traditional African attitudes to sex.

A survey of black women in Johannesburg revealed that 75% were willing to accept condoms if they could persuade their partners to use them, but that in practice only 2% had managed to do

so. Women are the chief victims with the highest HIV-positive rates among nurses and teachers.

Many African men have responded to the epidemic by choosing younger and younger partners. There is even a myth that sex with a young enough girl can cure an Aids-stricken male. Inevitably young women are the hardest hit, a phenomenon compounded by the high incidence of rape. More than 100 rapes are reported to the authorities every day, although this figure is believed to represent a minority of actual cases.

Despite the spread of the virus, the statistics manage to struggle on to only about page six of most South African newspapers because the crisis is still in "phoney war" stage —although there are more than 1.8 million HIV-positive South Africans, relatively few of them have developed Aids. Doctors say the virus seems to be taking longer to move through its cycle here, perhaps because South Africans with their higher standards of living, are healthier and therefore more resistant than people further north in Africa.

Without doubt, the present air of complacency will vanish as soon as high profile members of the elite begin to be affected and the implications for the economy sink in. Moreover, the spread of the virus may greatly damage the present racial reconciliation in South Africa, since Aids is now overwhelmingly a disease of blacks, and many whites are beginning to see almost every African as an Aids risk.

According to the passage, which of the following is not blamed as the factor that prevents anti- Aids campaign?

A.Over sensitive to religious belief.

B.Traditional African attitude to sex.

C.High standard of living.

D.The myth about having intercourse with a virgin.

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更多“Aids in South Africa is threatening to become a problem. At the end of 1993, 4.25% of Sout”相关的问题
第1题
As there was not enough money to bury all dead AIDS orphans, 23 babies were interred in a
modest cemetery in South Africa before World AIDS Day.

A.parentless children

B.miserable victims

C.contagious bodies

D.infections patient

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第2题
As there was not enough money to bury all dead AIDS orphans, 23 babies were interred in a
modest cemetery in South Africa before World AIDS Day.

A.parentless children

B.miserable victims

C.contagious bodies '

D.infectious patients

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第3题
The author says that South Africa is doing better than China because______.A.it has more m

The author says that South Africa is doing better than China because______.

A.it has more medical experts in AIDS than China.

B.its government shows more enthusiasm.

C.it devotes more money to this cause.

D.it's population of patients is decreasing.

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第4题
It can be inferred from the passage that China fall behind South Africa because ______.A.t

It can be inferred from the passage that China fall behind South Africa because ______.

A.there are not enough medical experts in AIDS.

B.the government's attitude toward AIDS problem is still to be changed.

C.of the lack of experience.

D.china have not enough money.

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第5题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D . Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.

On the past few days, two nations with large numbers of AIDS-infected people have announced plans to distribute a triple cocktail of life-prolonging antiretroviral drugs free to all who need it. China has been treating 5,000 patients and plans to expand the program to cover everyone in the country. South Africa's cabinet approved a plan that includes drugs for all who need them.

China spent years denying it had an AIDS problem. Until recently, South Africa's top officials minimized the epidemic, questioned whether H. I. V. was the cause of AIDS and labeled antiretroviral drugs "poisons". Both countries have now taken a courageous and essential step.

But only one is likely to succeed. Indeed, China's program is already failing. One in five Chinese who have received antiretroviral drugs has already stopped taking them, which can lead to the creation of drug-resistant strains of the virus. China has only about 100 doctors nationwide with experience in treating AIDS. Health workers are simply handing patient's bottles of pills. Most patients receive no counseling on how to take them or deal with their side effects, and little follow-up monitoring. China is also still determined to crack down on high-risk groups such as prostitutes and drug users, which drives the epidemic underground. Even recently, provincial police were beating AIDS patients protesting for treatment. Treating AIDS requires a network of health care workers and a political climate that does not stigmatize and discriminate against those who come forward.

South Africa's government, by contrast, understands that handing out pills is only part of the solution. The program, which will cost about $ 680 million a year by 2007, will spend only a third of its budget on buying drugs. Much of the money will go instead to establishing clinics and training thousands of doctors, nurses, counselors and other workers to staff them. The government plans to have a well-run clinic in every district by the end of the year, and in every municipality by the end of 2008.

South Africa has an influential national network of campaigners for AIDS treatment whose pres- sure and advice were crucial to devising the plan, and who will be crucial to its success. It also had help from the foundation led by former President Bill Clinton, which negotiated better prices for AIDS medicine. China's government, by contrast, made its decisions in secret and has yet to permit such widespread citizen activism on AIDS. But China has one huge advantage over South Africa: while one in nine South Africans has the AIDS virus, China's epidemic is far smaller. Now that China has decided to treat AIDS, it has a chance to learn from other nations before the deluge.

The author write this passage mainly to______.

A.bring up some facts about AIDS preventing and curing in the world.

B.urge Chinese government to do something about AIDS.

C.compare two countries in the AIDS-related work.

D.say something about the development in the AIDS preventing method.

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第6题
听力原文:W: Our President, since leaving office five years ago, has spent a huge amount of
time promoting AIDS awareness and prevention.

M: That is the thing I have been doing.

W: I know you just came back from Johannesburg, South Africa, part of your six-nation tour of Africa.

M: Right. You know, Africa has been more affected by AIDS than any other place in the world.

W: Why?

M: I think that's partly because there were not systems in place both to prevent people from contracting it and spreading it.

W: How is your work getting on?

M: I think we are beginning to make some headway not only in Africa, but in other places where it's a problem.

W: Can you name some?

M: It is spreading worldwide, growing even faster now in terms of the rate of increase in the former Soviet Union and the Caribbean, India, China.

W: I know your foundation is making a great deal of progress. Is it reasonable to expect that it can be brought under control?

M: Well, yes, but you have to take care of education and prevention and care and treatment at the same time, and the two things speed up each other.

W: How should we understand they speed up each other?

M: When you've got to treat people, you've got to overcome any kind of cultural dislike, talk about it and get young people to behave responsibly and you've got to do whatever you can to get as many people tested as quickly as possible but keep in mind that this is a disease that's one hundred percent preventable.

(20)

A.Traveling in South Africa to seek medical help.

B.Promoting awareness and prevention of AIDS.

C.Visiting clients and signing contracts.

D.Collecting fund for the new business.

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第7题
听力原文:W: Our President, since leaving office five years ago, [19] has spent a huge amou
nt of time promoting AIDS awareness and prevention.

M: That is the thing I have been doing.

W: I know you just came back from Johannesburg, South Africa, part of your six-nation tour of Africa.

M: Right. You know, Africa has been more affected by AIDS than any other place in the world.

W: Why?

M: [20] I think that's partly because there were not systems in place both to prevent people from contracting it and spreading it.

W: How is your work getting on?

M: I think we are beginning to make some headway not only in Africa, but in other places where it's a problem.

W: Can you name some?

M: It is spreading worldwide, growing even faster now in terms of the rate of increase in the former Soviet Union and the Caribbean, India, China.

W: I know your foundation is making a great deal of progress. Is it reasonable to expect that it can be brought under control?

M: Well, yes, [21] but you have to take care of education and prevention and care and treatment at the same time, and the two things speed up each other.

W: How should we understand they speed up each other?

M: When you've got to treat people, you've got to overcome any kind of cultural dislike, talk about it and get young people to behave responsibly and you've got to do whatever you can to get as many people tested as quickly as possible but keep in mind that this is a disease that's one hundred percent preventable.

(20)

A.Traveling in South Africa to seek medical help.

B.Promoting awareness and prevention of AIDS.

C.Visiting clients and signing contracts.

D.Collecting fund for the new business.

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第8题
Do you remember the Millennium (千禧年) Goals? When world leaders celebrated the year 2000

Do you remember the Millennium (千禧年) Goals? When world leaders celebrated the year 2000 with a serious promise to reduce poverty (贫穷) and hunger, check the spread of AIDS, getboys and girls into school, and improve public health, all by 2015? Well, three years down the road, and the UNDPs yearly collection of facts and figures alreadyshows that if we carry on as we are, the only goal likely to be met is that for reducing poverty by ahalf, and that is entirely due to the success of one country-China. It is so vast that the fast-grow-ing economy in China lifts millions of people above the poverty line, even though in Africa, LatinAmerica and the former Soviet Union, people have actually been getting poorer. Otherwise, progress is good only in parts. East Asia should meet its goal of reducing hungerby a half by 2015, and Latin America and the Caribbean are not far behind, but at the present speedof progress, Africa and South Asia wont get there for another hundred years. The good news is that it can be done-there are success stories. Ghana-an economic basketcase in the eighties and early nineties-has managed to find a way out of its difficulties and its nowcomfortably in the middle range of countries, way ahead of the much more naturally wealthy Niger-ia. For Congo, Cambodia or Iraq, ruined by war, or every southern African country damaged by AIDS, there is a Mauritius or a South Korea steadily working its way up the league table towards abetter life for its people. 根据材料请回答下列各 Which of the millennium goals is likely to be met according to the text?

A.Improving public health.

B.Reducing poverty by a half.

C.Sending children to school.

D.Stopping the spread of AIDS.

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第9题
They may not be the richest, but Africans remain the world's staunchest optimists. An annu
al survey by Gallup International, a research outfit, shows that, when asked whether this year will be better than last, Africa once again comes out on top. Out of 52,000 people interviewed all over the world, under half believe that things are looking up. But in Africa the proportion is close to 60%—almost twice as much as in Europe.

Africans have some reasons to be cheerful. The continent's economy has been doing fairly well with South Africa, the economic powerhouse, growing steadily over the past few years. Some of Africa's long-running conflicts, such as the war between the north and south in Sudan and the civil war in Congo, have ended. Africa even has its first elected female head of state, in Liberia.

Yet there is no shortage of downers too. Most of Africa remains dirt poor. Crises in places like Cote d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone and Zimbabwe are far from solved. And the democratic credentials of Ethiopia and Uganda, once the darlings of western donors, have taken a bad knock. AIDS killed over 2 million Africans in 2005, and will kill more this year.

So is it all just a case of irrational exuberance ? Meril James of Gallup argues that there is, in fact, usually very little relation between the survey's optimism rankings and reality. Africans, this year led by Nigerians, are consistently the most upbeat, whether their lot gets better or not. On the other hand, Greece— hardly the worst place on earth—tops the gloom-and-doom chart, followed closely by Portugal and France.

Ms James speculates that religion may have a lot to do with it. Nine out of ten Africans are religious, the highest proportion in the world. But cynics argue that most Africans believe that 2006 will be golden because things have been so bad that it is hard to imagine how they could possibly get worse. This may help explain why places that have suffered recent misfortunes, such as Kosovo and Afghanistan, rank among the top five optimists. Moussaka for thought for those depressed Greeks.

The statistics are employed in the first paragraph so as to indicate sort of______.

A.disparity

B.numbness

C.conformity

D.stagnation

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第10题
SECTION CNEWS BROADCASTDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Lis

SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST

Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.

听力原文: A new data shows that the global AIDS epidemic will cause a sharp drop in life expectancy in dozens of countries, in some cases, declines of almost three decades. Several nations are losing a century of progress in extending the length of life. Nations in every part of the world, 51 in all, are suffering declining life expectancies because of an increasing prevalence of HIV infection. The impact is occurring in Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, but is the greatest in Sub-Sahara Africa, a region with only ten percent of the world's population, but 700% of HIV infections.

Seven African countries have life expectancies of less than 40 years. For example, in Botswana, where 39% of the adult population is infected with HIV, life expectancy is 39 years. But by 2010, it will be less than 27 years. Without AIDS, it would have been 44 years. Life expectancies throughout the Caribbean and some central American nations will drop into the 60s by 2010, when it would otherwise be in tile 70s without AIDS. In Cambodia and Burma, they are predicted to decline to around 60 years old, for what would have been in the mid-60s. Even in countries where the number of new infections is dropping, such as Thailand, Uganda and Senegal, small life expectancy drop is forecast. Back in the early 1990s, we never would have suspected that population growth would turn negative because of AIDS mortality. In less than 10 years, we expect that 5 countries will be experiencing negative population growth because of AIDS mortality, including South Africa, Mozambique, Lesotho, Botswana and Swaziland.

Which of the following regions in the world will witness the sharpest drop in life expectancy?

A.Latin America.

B.Sub-Saharan Africa.

C.Asia.

D.The Caribbean.

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