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OPEN
SOCIETY INSTITUTE: "MAJOR SHIFT" IN AIDS RESPONSE, COALITION
DEMANDS HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTIONS IN HIV EFFORTS: 02/12/2007 (MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 02 December 2007 -- More
than 30 leading AIDS organizations today called for a major shift in the global
response to HIV/AIDS, issuing an unprecedented joint declaration on the need to
put legal and human rights protections at the center of HIV efforts.
“It’s
plain and simple: without a greater focus on law and human rights, the global
response to AIDS will stagger and fail,” said Jonathan Cohen of the Open
Society Institute, which sponsored the declaration. “This is widely
recognized, yet few governments have ensured human rights protections for people
living with or vulnerable to HIV.”
The
declaration, “Human
Rights and HIV/AIDS: Now More Than Ever,” focuses on populations most
vulnerable to HIV: women and girls, young people, injecting drug users, sex
workers, gay and bisexual men, and incarcerated people.
These
groups are the most in need of comprehensive HIV prevention and treatment
programs, including access to anti-retroviral drugs, yet they continue to face
discrimination and abuse worldwide and are often denied access to life-saving
programs. As a result, HIV continues to spread unchecked in communities
worldwide.
Up to
one-third of HIV infections outside Africa are caused by the sharing of syringes
among drug users, according to the United Nations.
Yet
measures to reduce syringe sharing, such as needle exchange programs and
substitution treatment with methadone, are banned or restricted by police
practice in many countries.
HIV
spreads rapidly in post-Soviet prisons, where prisoners are routinely denied
access to condoms, sterile syringes, effective drug dependence treatment,
voluntary HIV testing, and HIV medications.
The
Human Rights Declaration comes at a time when effective HIV-prevention,
treatment, and care programs are under threat.
Earlier
this year, the World Health Organization and UNAIDS released guidelines
recommending that in certain situations people should be tested for HIV unless
they explicitly decline the test.
Many
experts worry that making HIV testing more routine without scaling up human
rights protections could result in coercive, mass HIV testing programs. Such
programs would further stigmatize people living with HIV and deter people from
coming forward for needed health services.
“Universal
access to HIV testing is critical, but there is no evidence suggesting that
human rights need to be relaxed in order to achieve this goal,” said Kevin
Moody of the Global Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS, which endorsed the
declaration. “Public health and human rights can and should go hand in
hand.”
The lack
of legal protections for African women, who comprise the majority of infections
on the continent worst-affected by HIV, best illustrates the need to combine
public health with human rights approaches.
Under
customary laws throughout Africa, women are denied equal access to divorce,
property, and inheritance. In many countries, governments do not aggressively
prosecute domestic violence or even recognize the crime of marital rape.
This
leaves women vulnerable to HIV infection from their spouses and intimate
partners. Preventing HIV in these situations is as much a legal challenge as a
public health one, experts say.
“Legislation
protecting women’s rights languish in African parliaments, while coercive
responses to HIV are the order of the day,” said Christine Stegling of the
Botswana Network on Ethics, Law and HIV/AIDS. “This is a sad commentary on the
current state of the global AIDS response.”
The
endorsing organizations called on governments and international donors to take
concrete measures to place human rights at the center of their AIDS programs.
The groups also called for immediate protection of human rights defenders who
are intimidated or detained for their AIDS activism.
“People
should not be punished for holding their governments accountable to their
HIV/AIDS and human rights commitments,” said Wan Yanhai, who has been detained
numerous times by Chinese authorities for his AIDS activism. “Human rights
activists simply want to help their governments win the war against AIDS.”
The
declaration is available online in English, French, Russian, and Spanish at www.soros.org/initiatives/health/focus/law/articles_publications/publications/human_20071017.
It has
been endorsed by more than 30 organizations from Botswana, Canada, China,
Hungary, India, Kenya, Mexico, Namibia, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda, United
Kingdom, United States, and Zambia, as well as numerous international
organizations.
It has
been translated into Albanian, Bulgarian, French, Hungarian, Lithuanian,
Mandarin, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Thai, and a number of African
languages.
The
declaration is being launched locally and nationally at several events planned
from December 1-15, 2007. An international endorsement campaign will follow,
culminating with a global march for human rights at the 2008 International AIDS
Conference in Mexico City.
Labels: Open
Society Institute, HIV/AIDS,
~~~~~
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