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At front lines, AIDS war is falling apart
On the grounds of Uganda's biggest AIDS clinic, Dinavance Kamukama sits under a tree and weeps.
Her disease is probably quite advanced: her kidneys are failing and she is so weak she can barely walk. Leaving her young daughter with family, she rode a bus four hours to the hospital where her cousin Allen Bamurekye, born infected, both works and gets the drugs that keep her alive.
But there are no drugs for Ms. Kamukama. As is happening in other clinics in Kampala, all new patients go on a waiting list. A slot opens when a patient dies.
"So many people are being supported by America," Ms. Kamukama, 28, says mournfully. "Can they not help me as well?"
The answer increasingly is no. Uganda is the first and most obvious example of how the war on global AIDS is falling apart.