A number of AIDS researchers and prevention advocates, including pioneering expert Dr. Joep Lange, presumably perished on board Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which crashed Thursday in eastern Ukraine having been shot down by a missile.
The activists were en route to Melbourne, Australia, for the 20th International AIDS Conference, due to begin on Sunday. Former President Bill Clinton is listed as one of the conference’s featured speakers.
In a statement, the International AIDS Society said “the conference will go ahead as planned and will include opportunities to reflect and remember those we have lost.”
The deaths of AIDS experts and their family members were first reported by Australian news outlets — the Australian, the Star Observer, and the Age — Friday morning.
Among the reported victims were Glenn Raymond Thomas, a Geneva-based spokesman for the World Health Organization; Pim de Kuijer, an AIDS activist from the Netherlands; Martine de Schutter, who worked for organizations associated with the Netherlands-based AIDS Fonds foundation.
Lange, a former president of the International AIDS Society, played a key role in the early years of the AIDS crisis. According to The New York Times, he began researching the epidemic in 1983. Lange went on to lead clinical research and drug development for the W.H.O in the mid-1990s. Most recently, he was a professor of medicine at the University of Amsterdam and executive scientific director of the Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development, where he had conducted research on antiretroviral therapy and mother-to-child transmission of H.I.V.









