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UN: AIDS Conference Whitewash |  |
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Human Rights Watch
June 19, 2001
If government censors get their way at next week's United Nations
conference on HIV/AIDS, the denial and discrimination that have
helped spread the disease will continue unabated.
Several government delegations, including those of the United
States, Egypt, Libya, and the Vatican, are attempting to delete
from the draft declaration of the U.N. General Assembly Special
Session on HIV/AIDS any mention of that groups at particularly
high risk of HIV infection are men having sex with men, sex
workers and their clients, and injecting drug users and their sex
partners.
"Moral squeamishness shouldn't stand in the way of finding
solutions to this terrible crisis," said Kenneth Roth, executive
director of Human Rights Watch. "At a conference devoted to
fighting AIDS, governments must not replicate the silence and
denial that have driven the spread of the disease."
In language agreed to by Canada, Australia, and several Latin
American and European countries, the draft declaration makes
explicit the goal of reducing incidence among "men who have sex
with men, sex workers, [and] injecting drug users and their sexual
partners," as well as prisoners and refugees. The United States
proposes striking this list and replacing it with the vague and
anodyne phrase, "vulnerable individuals," including those engaging
in "risky sexual behavior." The Vatican prefers a similarly
euphemistic reference to "people who have multiple sex partners."
Egypt suggests substituting the judgmental phrase, "homosexuality
among men, prostitution, and other forms of irresponsible sexual
behavior."
"HIV/AIDS is born in large part of discrimination against
women, gay men, drug users, sex workers, and others whose status
has impeded their access to services, information, and social
support," said Joanne Csete, a public health expert on AIDS at
Human Rights Watch. "Pretending that these groups don't exist, or
reinforcing discrimination against them, will only accelerate the
spread of the epidemic by pushing them further underground and out
of reach of the services they desperately need to contain the
disease."
Csete is the author of a report on violations of the rights of
AIDS orphans in Kenya, to be released next week.
Violation of civil and political rights is the engine that
spreads HIV/AIDS in many parts of the world. Where women are
unable to negotiate the terms of their sexual relations, where gay
men and sex workers are marginalized and excluded from services,
and where sexual violence is prevalent, HIV/AIDS flourishes. In
negotiations earlier this month, the United States nonetheless
rejected a proposal by the European Union and the Rio Group that
the declaration adopt a "rights-based approach" to combating
HIV/AIDS.
"If governments attempt to fight HIV/AIDS without addressing
the rights violations that fuel the epidemic and result from it,
they will be doing only half the job—or less," said Csete.
The draft declaration of the AIDS conference was meant to be
completed in preparatory meetings ending May 25 at which civil
society organizations were present. However, since then,
discussions have continued over contentious points in closed-door
sessions attended only by governments.
"The independent voices most likely to highlight the role of
human rights abuse in the spread of HIV/AIDS have been excluded
from these deliberations," said Roth. "Sadly, governments seem
determined to shut out uncomfortable messages, even at the risk of
a less effective strategy for fighting this deadly disease.
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