Almost 12% of the Mozambican population is infected with HIV/Aids, a government survey said.
"Anything above 5% means the country is in a tragic situation. A prevalence rate of 11.5% is already twice as
much," Health Minister Paulo Ivo Garrido said in the capital Maputo.
The six million dollar (R46 million) study conducted by the health ministry and the national statistics department was the country's first comprehensive report on the prevalence of the virus.
It sampled 16,600 people from the southern African nation's 10 provinces in 2009.
"The situation in Mozambique is extremely serious," Garrido.
Sub-Sahara hardest hit
Over two-thirds of people living with HIV worldwide are in sub-Saharan Africa, where UN AIDS estimates the adult prevalence rate at 5.2%.
The study found that women were the hardest hit by the virus, with 13.1% affected, compared with 9.2% of men aged 15 to 49 years.
Prevalence was higher in the southern provinces of Maputo and Gaza, the main travel routes to South Africa. "The Mozambican government considers Aids the first threat to the country. We will continue to battle it to reduce prevalence," said Garrido.
South Africa has the world's highest number of HIV infections, with an estimated 5.7 of the 48 million population living with the virus, according to the UN AIDS agency. - (Sapa/AFP, July 2010)