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Criminalising HIV/AIDS

November 18th 2008 20:24
Justice Michael Kirby
Justice Michael Kirby gave the 2008 Burnet Institute Oration Monday


Monday night I had the privilege of meeting Justice Michael Kirby, and hearing him speak at the Burnet Institute on the nexus between human rights and combating HIV/AIDS.


He’s worried about the rising tendency around the world for governments to use the criminal law to try to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS, and indeed is working with the UN and WHO on the issue.

Justice Kirby argues that the unique nature of the HIV epidemic – the modes of transmission, the lack of a cure or vaccine – means it has to be handled like no other epidemic. It cannot be handled just by medical means. Human rights are also an essential part of an effective response.

The argument goes something like this - and I should say these are my words, not Justice Kirbys.

Those most at risk from HIV are sex workers, men who have sex with men, and injecting drug users. Where those activities are illegal, people are reluctant to seek treatment or information on how to protect themselves, because that could identify them as ‘criminals’ and they could end up in jail. That makes controlling the spread of HIV more difficult.

For example, in the US, the ‘war on drugs’ has made it politically impossible to legalise needle exchange programs and safe injecting rooms. Hopefully, with the election of the new president, the US will come to its senses on this. As a result injecting drug users are one of the main transmission routes for HIV.


Where needle exchanges are possible, as in Australia, the numbers are tiny. In short, respecting human rights is essential in an effective response to HIV.

It’s also pretty stupid to put HIV infected people into jails, especially if you’re not going to provide safe-sex information, condoms and clean needles in there. That just turns them into HIV transmission factories.

At first sight, prosecuting people who infect others with the virus might sound attractive, but using the criminal law is problematic, to say the least. In some African countries, where a large percentage of the population is infected, it’s clearly unworkable. You can’t lock up half a country. The economy couldn’t stand the cost. The temptation – especially for an autocratic regime – could be to make it a capital offence. Bullets are way cheaper than jail cells.

What makes it worse is that the police and judiciary may be corrupt. People who think they might be jailed or shot if the authorities knew they were HIV positive are not going to disclose their status readily – even (or perhaps especially) to government health agencies set up to provide treatment. Nor are people going to seek out prevention advice, if this might bring them under suspicion.

Then there’s the question of how you define the ‘crime’. Do you make it illegal to knowingly pass on the virus, or to intentionally pass on the virus?

If it’s knowingly, then potentially any HIV positive person could be arrested for having unprotected sex with an uninfected partner. It could be tricky to prove you didn’t know you were infected: it could be argued, for example, that given your mode of life, you ought to have known you could be infected.

If it’s intentionally, then it’s similar to assault, with the virus as your weapon, but then there are problems proving – or disproving – intent.

Not to mention the near-impossibility, even in well-run and sophisticated countries, of proving scientifically that a particular sex act led to sero-conversion. That means identifying the specific strain of HIV involved and then showing it could only have been passed on from x to y during sex-act z. It's so difficult, in fact, that charges here in Australia have been dropped because proof was impossible to obtain.

But – horror scenarios in autocratic countries aside - if you don’t have criminal sanctions available as a last resort, how do you deal with someone who is determined to spread the virus? As recent cases have shown, there are some people who ignore medical attempts at behaviour modification and control. At what point do you decide that their human rights are less important than those of the people being infected without their knowledge?

Under Victorian public health law, that decision is made by doctors. You can be quarantined indefinitely – effectively imprisoned – if you’re deemed to be a danger to others. But should we really be giving doctors, rather than the law, the power of indefinite detention?

Although I don’t doubt the integrity of Australian doctors, it seems to me that to have your fate decided in secret by a committee of health experts is not acceptable in a democratic society. Recent cases, where the doctors dithered for far too long before involving the police, indicate they they’re uncomfortable with the judge/jury/jailer role, too.

There are no easy answers. Wholesale criminalisation is counter-productive, yet we must retain criminal sanctions as a last resort. I wish Justice Kirby well in his discussions at the UN and the WHO - but I don't envy him.
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ChillOut

Same-sex equality seems to be going backwards even in friendly locations.

Bans on gay marriage, fostering and adoption have passed in several US states, including California. Barack Obama needed to mobilise black and hispanic voters, but most of them are religious and anti-gay. He downplayed his support for gay rights, so they voted against us while voting for him.

A large-scale survey in UK newspaper The Observer found 56% think we shouldn’t be allowed to adopt, 40% want a higher age of consent for us, and 25% think we should be recriminalized. The British Labor government has enacted a lot of pro-gay and anti-discrimination laws in recent years but that hasn’t made people like us.

And at the time of writing, the Victorian Assisted Reproductive Treatment Bill is on the brink of defeat. Upper house members say their constituents don’t want gays and lesbians to have parenting rights.

These failures are our own fault. Our small number of committed activists do a great job on politicians and big city elites, but we’ve yet to win over Joe The Plumber and his missus out in Cranbourne or Wodonga.

Californian gay rights campaigners didn’t involve themselves in black and hispanic communities, and we don’t engage with our neighbours in the outer suburbs and the bush. Yet doing so brings multiple benefits.

We need a majority of all voters on our side, and strange as it may seem, that starts with making friends with them. Especially outside major cities, where levels of violence and self-harm are high, and support services for our community are virtually non-existent.

But you don’t turn neighbours to friends by painting yourself as a victim. You do it by helping to solve their problems. As a boss of mine once told me, “If you want promotion, don’t bring me problems. Bring me solutions.”

Country towns, already struggling with drought, now face the strong possibility of a recession. People fear for their jobs, their businesses, their homes. What solutions can we offer?

One proven way is through local rainbow festivals, bringing in publicity and business - and local authorities know it. ChillOut’s economic importance has been acknowledged with a two-year grant of $45k from Rural Development Victoria, in addition to money from Tourism Victoria and Hepburn Shire Council to secure its future. The possibility that Yackandandah Spring Migration might fold has local authorities actually competing to secure the Migration for their town.

Now the gay community becomes a solution, not a problem. Working and socialising alongside gays and lesbians, people learn that we’re ordinary people just like them, trying to keep our heads above water and caring for the ones we love. Prejudice against local gay and lesbian residents is lessened. Young same-sex attracted people learn they are not alone, and can find role models to look up to. And we earn the right to ask people to support us when we seek to be treated equally.

We won’t win them all. But we will win enough to turn mainstream politics in our favour, erode the dam that blocks gay marriage and adoption, and head off any backlash like the one threatening in the UK. On top of which, we get to have a lot of fun.

Who said politics had to be boring?
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No We Can't

November 6th 2008 02:37
Obama

Yes, he can, but no, we can't, as anti-gay measures pass in several states.

Barack Obama’s win, which symbolises a great victory over race prejudice, has inadvertently strengthened prejudice and discrimination against gays and lesbians.

Obama brought unprecedented numbers of black voters to the polls, many of them from the black churches, which are notably conservative on gay issues. He brought out the Hispanic vote, with its strong Catholic bias, too.

But he failed to support gay marriage, and his support for gay rights during the campaign can best be described as lukewarm.

As a result, the California same-sex marriage ban won 52 percent of the vote. A ban also passed in Florida and Arizona.

Arkansas passed a ban on unmarried couples from adopting or fostering, which was targeted at gay men and lesbians.

There was one ray of light, as voters in Connecticut, the third state, after Massachusetts and California, to allow marriage between people of the same sex, rejected a plan to hold a constitutional convention.

Opponents of same-sex marriage had expressed hope that a convention could lead to a ballot initiative to ban the practice, which the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled legal last month.

Obama did at least mention the word gay in his victory speech, as he claimed the Presidency on behalf of all Americans, not just those who voted for him.

But a gesture is not enough. H will have his work cut out to remove this discrimination and prejudice that three more states have now enshrined in their constitutions. We will be watching closely.
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Cometh the hour, cometh Obama

October 26th 2008 06:13
Obama

Watching the US election reminded me why, after twelve months trying to fit in, I simply could not live there. The relentless trivialisation of just about everything; the violence and poverty under the glitzy tissue-paper wrapping; at least half the population crushed into superstitious idiocy by the worst public health, welfare and education systems outside the third world; the selfish unwillingness of the other half to take any kind of responsibility for any of the problems in case it cost them money; the sheer gullibility of the majority that brought home the truth of the old saying, ‘there’s one born every minute.’

[ Click here to read more ]
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'Vagina Monologue' author nails Palin

September 21st 2008 01:51
Burning Earth
Burning the Earth

Sometimes someone else says it better than you ever can. Like now

[ Click here to read more ]
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It's marriage, Jim, but not as we know it.

September 19th 2008 11:33
Takei Wedding
Live long & prosper!


Just had to post this so I could use the headline - the story's here along with a great gallery of pics


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Socialist America
Back in the USSA

Funny isn’t it? US politics is entirely lacking a left wing – there is only a centre right, and an extreme right. Both parties believe in letting the market run free, don’t interfere with business, abhor public ownership . . . . .

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Ernestine Palin

August 30th 2008 21:17
Sarah Palin


John McCain is 72 – so whoever he picks for his Veep is important. S/he could be called on to step into the top job at any time. So he picks an almost totally unknown woman, Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska


[ Click here to read more ]
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Tsvangarai quits, Mugabe wins

June 23rd 2008 00:21
Zimbabwe riot
Mugabe supporter tell MDC supporter how to vote


As usual, everybody cares but no-one acts


[ Click here to read more ]
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