Top AIDS official says six colleagues on Malaysia plane, not 100

Samatha Gvanbery, left, with Kelli Dillon sign the memorial in Los Angeles on Friday, July 18, 2014 for former president of the International AIDS Society Dr. Joep Lange. The prominent researcher and others were headed to an AIDS conference in Australia when their Malaysia Airlines flight went down in the Ukraine. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

MELBOURNE—International AIDS Society president Francoise Barre-Sinoussi on Saturday said six colleagues heading for a global conference in Melbourne were on a Malaysian plane that crashed over Ukraine, not 100 as reports suggested.

“The number that we have confirmed through our contacts with authorities in Australia, in Malaysia, and Dutch authorities as well is six people. It may be a little bit more, but not the numbers that have been announced,” she said.
Australian newspapers on Friday said as many as 100 medical researchers, scientists, doctors and activists were on Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 that went down en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur on Thursday.

All 298 people on board died, with US officials blaming armed Ukrainian rebels for downing the jet with a missile.

UNAIDS executive director Michel Sidibe had tweeted that “many” delegates to the 20th International AIDS Conference were on board, reinforcing fears of a high fatality rate.

Those confirmed dead include prominent Dutchman Joep Lange, a pioneer of cheap anti-retrovirals for the poor and a former International AIDS Society president.

Officials said Pim de Kuijer from STOPAIDSNOW was also on board, along with Lucie van Mens, director of AIDS Action Europe and her colleague Maria Adriana de Schutter.

World Health Organization official Glenn Thomas and Jacqueline van Tongeren from the Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development also died in the crash.

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