Getting to Zero: How Innovation, Policy Reform and Focused Investments can Help South Asia End the AIDS Epidemic by 2030
December 31, 2015

Getting to Zero: How Innovation, Policy Reform and Focused Investments can Help South Asia End the AIDS Epidemic by 2030

SAARC’s initiatives to foster peace and cooperation, innovative policies to encourage trade and investment and a leadership committed to positive change are playing a key role in unleashing the enormous potential of the region. Above all, the most important factor in the emergence of South Asia as a global force are its people.

Home to a quarter of the world’s population, SAARC countries of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, are now on the threshold of an unprecedented social and economic transformation.

SAARC’s initiatives to foster peace and cooperation, innovative policies to encourage trade and investment and a leadership committed to positive change are playing a key role in unleashing the enormous potential of the region. Above all, the most important factor in the emergence of South Asia as a global force are its people. With progression and development, come questions of sustainability. Does progress mean countries of South Asia have a secure future?

Organizations:

South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC)

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