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Human Rights and the AIDS Crisis: The
Debate Over Resources |  |
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Human Rights Watch
June 10, 2000
For well over a decade, the human-rights perspective has
contributed to the evolving public-health understanding of how to
address AIDS. We owe a particular debt of gratitude to the late
Jonathan Mann, whom it was my privilege to know. He, more than
anyone, highlighted the synergistic relationship between health
and human rights.
He helped us understand that respect for the rights of people
who are infected or at risk of infection by HIV is essential for
preventing and treating the disease. If we risk discrimination,
coercion, or breach of confidentiality, we are less likely to be
tested, to seek treatment, or to learn how to avoid infecting
ourselves or others. He also showed us that combating
discrimination and social marginalization can help fight the
vulnerability that handicaps many people, particularly women and
girls, in their efforts to avoid infection.
Today, however, a new public-health challenge has come to the
fore in the fight against AIDS. The issue is less what should be
done to prevent or treat HIV infection than where we will find the
enormous resources we need. Who should pay the cost of combating
AIDS? In particular, does the industrialized world have an
obligation to help the people of the developing world, and if so,
what precisely is owed? Should obligations arising out of the AIDS
pandemic differ from obligations arising out of other
public-health crises or from the general need for basic health
care?
None of these life-and-death questions admits easy answers. But
international human-rights standards can help point a useful
direction. The relevant standards are not the ones of civil and political
rights – the issues of discrimination and individual freedom
that so far have played the largest role in fashioning a response
to AIDS. Rather, the pertinent standards are found in the less
familiar terrain of economic and social rights.
The leading human rights treaty in this area is the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
Other human rights treaties are also relevant, but today I will
limit my discussion to the Covenant. Adopted by the U.N. General
Assembly in 1966, the Covenant has been ratified by 142
governments. I should note that, unfortunately, our host country,
South Africa, as well as my own country, the United States, have
signed the Covenant but not yet ratified it, evidently for fear of
being bound by it.
The Covenant requires governments to respect the right to the
basic necessities of human life – the right to such things as
work, education, food, clothing, and housing. The most important
right for our purposes is Article 12, which proclaims the right of
everyone to enjoy "the highest attainable standard of physical and
mental health." Among other steps, this right requires governments
to prevent, treat and control diseases, and to assure medical care
and attention to everyone in the event of illness.
As you can see, if this right were fully respected, we would be
well on our way to solving the AIDS crisis. Treatment would be
available to everyone, and effective prevention strategies could
be widely implemented. Yet, obviously, we are far from that
moment. Indeed, when it comes to AIDS, it seems almost a cruel
joke even to assert the right to health because governments seem
to accord it so little weight.
Why is this? Why do rights-based arguments seem so ineffective
in convincing governments to provide the resources needed to fight
AIDS? The difficulty is best illustrated by contrast with a more
classic rights-based appeal – say, a demand to stop torture. Even
in countries that practice torture, torture is shameful. By
exposing a government's use of torture, we can shame the
government to curtail this inhumane practice. So why can't similar
public shaming be used to force governments to devote the
resources needed to fight AIDS? It can, but the process is not
nearly as straightforward. Let me explain why, and how we might
proceed.
The difficulty with invoking economic and social rights is that
the duty to respect them is far more qualified than the duty to
respect civil and political rights. Governments are expected to
uphold civil and political rights immediately. Moreover,
responsibility for doing so is assigned almost exclusively to the
national government of the country in question; there is no
opportunity to pass the burden on to others. By contrast, the
economic and social rights treaty allows its rights to be
fulfilled gradually, over time. Each government is asked only to
"take steps" to secure these rights, and to do so only "to the
maximum of its available resources, with a view to achieving
progressively [their] full realization." Moreover, the treaty
assigns responsibility for compliance more broadly – not only to
the immediate national government, but also to the international
community as a whole, through the duty to provide "international
assistance."
This gradualism and shared responsibility make it much more
difficult to shame a particular national government for its poor
state of health care – or, for that matter, its inadequate
education or housing. Governments can deflect criticism by blaming
others. There is no easy way to move beyond this finger-pointing.
Or, governments can simply assert that their current
contributions, stingy as they might be, are all they owe to meet
the AIDS challenge. Again, there are no clear benchmarks by which
to rebut these claims.
So how, given these qualified, divided responsibilities, might
we enforce economic and social rights? Or, more specifically for
our purposes, how might we uphold a right to adequate AIDS health
care? How do we move beyond the finger-pointing and evasions to
hold particular governments responsible?
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