This myriad of laws, across multiple legal systems, has one thing in common: by punishing those who have HIV, or the practices that may leave them vulnerable to infection, such laws simply serve to drive people further from disclosure, testing and treatment—fostering, not fighting, the global epidemic. It is time to say, “No more.” Just as we need new science to help fight the viral epidemic, we need new thinking to combat an epidemic of bad laws that is undermining the precious gains made in HIV awareness, prevention and treatment over the past thirty years.
Legal and policy alternatives to HIV criminalisation: community-level and societal approaches
by Edwin J Bernard
Legislators in Mauritius decided not to criminalize exposure to HIV or even HIV transmission. Legislators realized that legislation criminalising HIV exposure and/or transmission would not be able to withstand a constitutional challenge, because of the difficulties with proof, the likely vagueness of the definition of exposure, and the risk of selective prosecution. The main reason for not criminalising HIV transmission was, however, the concern about detrimental impacts on public health and the conviction that it would not serve any preventive purposes. Criminalisation would have created more problems than solving them. Therefore, Mauritius decided to put its resources where they are most likely to have a positive impact on reducing the spread of HIV: increased funding for HIV testing and counselling and for evidence-informed prevention measures.
Rama Valayden, Attorney General and Minister of Justice and Human Rights, Republic of Mauritius[i]
Policymakers may well feel under pressure to use the criminal law in response to HIV to be seen to be “doing something” that appears to have an impact upon their local HIV epidemic. This pressure is likely to be felt more acutely where it appears that HIV prevention programmes have failed.[ii]
Nevertheless, UNAIDS recommends that instead of being tempted to apply the criminal law in these situations, governments should implement evidence-informed and human rights-based (but sometimes controversial) HIV prevention programmes to deal with the myriad underlying causes of HIV transmission and acquisition.
This way, the significant personal and financial resources that may be spent on pursuing a limited number of individual cases within the criminal justice system could be more productively used to expand HIV prevention efforts, including individual, society- and community-wide education; making available condoms and other HIV prevention tools (including ART), MTCT services, sterile drug use equipment, and other strategies designed to reduce HIV infection on an individual and population level. In short, they should be aiming for policies that support universal access to HIV testing, treatment and support services.[iii] [iv]
In many jurisdictions around the world, a substantial number of individuals at highest risk of acquiring HIV – people who use drugs, sex workers, men who have sex with men – are criminalised and punitive approaches drives people underground. [v] Consequently, UNAIDS recommends fewer punitive laws and more supportive policies in favour of expanding programmes proven to reduce HIV transmission while protecting the human rights both of people living with HIV and those who are HIV-negative. These include:
- Removing criminal offences against men who have sex with men;
- Removing criminal sanctions on sex work so as to promote empowerment of sex workers;
- Allowing the provision of evidence-informed harm-reduction programmes for people who use drugs;
- Enacting privacy and anti-discrimination laws that protect people living with HIV;
- Enacting laws that ensure prevention and treatment programmes reach all people living with HIV and empower them with information, education, and treatment.[vi]
In addition, governments may also consider addressing some of the root causes underlying vulnerability to HIV infection, such as income and gender inequality, sexual violence, discrimination, and problematic substance use. Since women are both biologically and socio-economically more vulnerable to acquiring HIV, UNAIDS suggests that governments strengthen and enforce laws against rape (inside and outside marriage), and other forms of violence against women and girls; improve the efficacy of criminal justice systems in investigating and prosecuting sexual offences against women and girls, and support women’s equality and economic independence through legislation, programmes and services.[vii]
Case study: South Africa – HIV-specific criminal law not necessary
In 2001, the South African Law Commission undertook a comprehensive review of the need for an HIV-specific criminal law, concluding that such a law was not necessary due to a lack of evidence that alleged wilful or negligent behaviour by people with HIV was occurring frequently enough to warrant such a law and that “a change to the law would therefore probably be based (without denying that real instances of dangerous conduct occur) on general fears, anxieties and “urban legends”. It also concluded that: “an HIV-specific statutory offence/s will have no or little practical utility; the social costs entailed in creating an HIV-specific statutory offence/s are not justified; and an HIV-specific statutory offence/s will infringe the right to privacy to an extent that is not justified.”[viii]
Nevertheless, pressure to create an HIV-specific law continued during debates for the new Sexual Offences Bill. In submissions made to the Parliamentary Joint Ad Hoc Committee on Socio-Economic Development, the National Working Group on the Sexual Offences Bill, a consortium of civil society groups, stated in 2005: “There are existing common law offences that already criminalise the deliberate transmission – these have rarely been used and give rise to difficult questions of evidence and proof. A new offence will not change this in any way.”[ix] Earlier versions of the Bill sought to define non-disclosure of HIV status prior to otherwise consensual sex as rape. However, that definition was not included in the Sexual Offences Act that was ultimately approved in 2007. [x] Rather, the legislation mandated HIV antibody testing for suspected rapists and allows for longer prison sentences for rapists subsequently found to be HIV-positive.[xi]
[i] Quoted in UNAIDS/UNDP. International Consultation on the Criminalization of HIV Transmission: Summary of main issues and conclusions. Geneva, 2008b. Also available is a short interview with Minister Valayden on UNAIDS‘ website.
[ii] Human Right Watch. World AIDS Day: Punitive Laws Threaten HIV Progress. Press Release, November 25, 2009.
[iii] UNAIDS/UNDP. Policy brief: Criminalization of HIV transmission. UNAIDS, 2008a.
[iv] Op cit. UNAIDS/UNDP (2008b).
[v] UNDP. Removal of punitive laws essential for effective AIDS responses. Press Release, August 10, 2009.
[vi] GNP+ and UNAIDS. Positive Health Dignity and Prevention. Technical Consultation Report, Tunisia, April 2009.
[vii] Op cit. UNAIDS/UNDP (2008a)
[viii] South African Law Commission. Fifth Interim Report on Aspects of the Law Relating to AIDS: The Need for a Statutory Offence Aimed at Harmful HIV-Related Behaviour, April 2001.
[ix] National Working Group on the Sexual Offences Bill. Submission to the Parliamentary Joint Ad Hoc Committee on Socio-economic Development. South Africa, 2005.
[x] South African Department of Justice and Social Development. The New Sexual Offences Act. (Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act, 2007.
[xi] Proposal discussed in Matthews S. Criminalising deliberate HIV transmission – is this good public health? SAMJ 96 (4): 312-314, 2006. See also Bernard EJ. South Africa: New rape laws mandate HIV testing for alleged offender. Criminal HIV Transmission. January 8, 2008.
Norway: Dissenting Law Commission member, Kim Fangen, ‘stands alone’
Last week’s publication of the Norwegian Law Commission’s disappointing report was “a crucial moment for us in Norway – actually for all HIV activists in the Nordic countries,” says Kim Fangen, the only member of the Commission to vote against the use of a specific law to control and punish people with HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.
Kim’s alternative vision, as detailed in Chapter 10 of the report (only available in the full Norwegian version, not the English summary, but translated into English by the HIV Justice Network and included in full below) is one of a supporting and enabling environment, where people living with HIV are seen as part of ‘the solution’ and not ‘the problem.’
“It is not through criminal law that we reduce the spread of HIV,” he writes. “I believe that HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are solely a health issue. That’s where the focus should and must be, if one wants to prevent more infections. This means that we must change our mindset and change our course from criminal regulation to a health-related approach.”
His solution is a uniqely Norwegian version of the new paradigm of HIV prevention for people living with HIV, known as Positive, Health, Dignity and Prevention – a comprehensive approach to supporting people living with HIV with their prevention and social needs, not through fear or coercion but through empowerment and with dignity. Much of the solution is already there in Norway’s HIV Action Plan – but as Kim notes, with a few exceptions, little of the plan has actually been actioned.
In his first interview since the Commission report was released, Kim tells the HIV Justice Network how he feels about the report and what the rest of us can do to help effect a change for the better to mitigate the Nordic region’s overly harsh and punitive approaches to people living with HIV.
Q: As the only person openly living with HIV on the twelve person Commission, what did you hope to achieve?
When I was asked to be asked to be part of the Norwegian Law Commission, I was very happy and proud. I, and many of my friends and colleagues living with HIV, believed it was a promising sign that they had reserved one of the Commission’s twelve seats for someone living with HIV.
I actually believed that there was a genuine will and desire to investigate the issues raised in our mandate and to produce recommendations that hopefully would point Norway in a new direction, towards decriminalising potential HIV ‘exposure’ and unintentional transmission.
I did not think that it would be easy, but I thought it would be possible. I honestly thought that finally there would be no need to single out people with HIV as group so hazardous that Norwegian society felt the need of a specific law to protect itself.
What I never envisaged was that, in the end, I would be standing alone.
Q: When did you realise that you point of view was not going to be supported by the rest of Commission?
It was quite early in the process. I realised that not only was it going to be difficult, but that I was quite alone not wanting a specific law.
I really feel that the reason for my inclusion on this Commission was not to learn more from those of us living with HIV, but was instead a kind of tokenism – by having a person living with HIV on board I believe they thought they would be able to silence us once and for all.
Q: What disappoints you the most about the report?
I cannot help feeling that a great opportunity has been lost and the goodwill of people with HIV misused. This is a sentiment I share with many of my friends and colleagues both at home and abroad. Many of us are so very disappointed. We honestly believed we would finally experience a change now, just as we, ironically, are about to commemorate 30 years since the first Norwegian was diagnosed with HIV.
And so I am afraid that we will not get the debate we so desperately need. I worry that this report will provide politicians with easy solutions, something Norway will not benefit from.
Q: Is there anything positive in the report’s recommendations that you would like to highlight? For example, I was impressed by the recognition that people with HIV (and other communicable diseases) require “psychosocial support to enable them to handle the risk of infection properly, and assistance in dealing with any underlying problems such as mental illness or substance use.”
I’m glad that you pointed this out. I do feel that I have been listened to when I have spoken of supporting people living with HIV, and the clinics can do much more to help in guiding and strengthening each individual. This is the kind of work I am directly involved in myself.
Q: Do you think the report’s content and conclusions are completely consistent with Norway’s commitments to human rights and in terms of making laws based on evidence and not ideology?
No, I do not. I have on several occasions talked about our responsibility to practise what we preach. I do not think Norway is doing that.
Q: How might the report impact the rest of the Nordic region?
HIV and the law are being debated and discussed all over the Nordic region. All of the four countries are at different stages but our goals are the same, to end the overly broad criminalisation of HIV.
My hope is that Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Norway will join forces. We will be so much stronger if we pull together. Next year will we will be commemorating 30 years since Norway had its first HIV diagnosis. We, in the newly-established HIV Patient Network will be using that to the fullest and, of course, criminalisation will be on top of the list.
Q: The process will take another 18 months before parliament decides on whether or not to enact or abolish a specific criminal law. What are your plans?
My only hope now is that the international response to this report will be so substantial, so clear, and so loud that it will have an impact on Norway’s politicians.
I am hoping to organise a joint Nordic meeting in Oslo sometime during 2013, preferably before the deadline for the hearing letter goes out, when we are still able to influence the process before it is finalised some time in 2014.
If we can thoroughly examine the situation in all of the Nordic countries, invite politicians, medical and legal practitioners, experts and specialists in fields like sexuality, ethics and human rights, as well as members of the international civil society, we should be able to strengthen our arguments and support those in office who actually can directly influence the debate.
In the meantime, for those who haven’t already signed the Oslo Declaration on HIV Criminalisation, please take a moment to read it and support our efforts. I would like thank everyone who contributed, who made this possible, and especially to the HIV Justice Network. I know that it has already caused a stir in Norway, and I feel that there is so much more to gain from it. It’s like a tool that is still in its wrapping, and it has yet to reach its full potential.
Below is the full English translation of Kim’s submission to the Commission, outlining his alternative vision, from Chapter 10 of the report.
One of the committee members, Kim Fangen, lives with HIV and has been involved in working in this field for many years.
As stated during the assessments in Section 11.2.1.2, Mr Fangen says that there should be no special penal targeting disease transmission directly between humans. Mr Fangen believes that any criminal proceedings should take place using the general penalty provisions of bodily harm, and that these penal provisions should only be applied where the perpetrator acted with the intent to infect another, and the disease is transferred.
The rationale for this position is stated in the following that Mr Fangen has written on this matter:
New time. New inspiration.
HIV has been a part of our global reality for over 30 years. It is estimated that 60 million people have been infected during this period, 35 million of whom are alive today. For the first time in the history of HIV in the world, data show that the number of people that are newly diagnosed HIV positive is on a downward trend. This is primarily because many people with HIV have access to treatment. Treatment not only allows people with HIV to live a long healthy life, but the majority who are on treatment have a fully suppressed HIV viral load and are thus very unlikely to be infectious. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently reviewed the latest research data and concludes that antiretroviral therapy reduces the risk of a person with HIV transmitting the virus to an HIV-negative person by 96%. UNAIDS has begun to talk about a world without HIV in its 2011-2015 strategic plan, ‘Getting To Zero’. Medical progress has thus changed the situation in a very positive direction. This change should also be reflected in legislation and case law.
However, the situation is not only positive. In some countries and in some groups, we are seeing an increase in the number of new HIV diagnoses. In Norway, the number of annual new HIV diagnoses among gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men has tripled since 2002. This increase is very serious and requires that we strengthen and develop prevention among both HIV-negative and HIV-positive individuals.
Does HIV belong in the criminal code?
As person living with HIV, my primary focus has been on HIV when the committee has discussed details of the currently adopted provisions for serious communicable infectious diseases in the 2005 Penal Code § § 237 and 238. Most of my arguments stem from the experiences we have had with HIV in the applicable provisions of the 1902 Penal Code § 155, which for years has rightly been called the ‘HIV paragraph’. As you know, this is not an HIV-specific law, but in practice it has, almost without exception, been used to prosecute HIV. There are only a few cases where it has been applied with another communicable disease (respectively, hepatitis B and hepatitis C).
I think that HIV-related work, both in terms of caring for people with HIV, and preventing new infections, has not well been served by such legislation, which stigmatises those of us with HIV and creates the perception that were are potential criminals, and does not take into account that people with HIV have the right to a good sex life. The legislation does not relate to the psycho-social challenges it means to live with HIV, and is not adapted to the fact that the reduced quality of life and difficulty in coping with safer sex are often intertwined. The legislation has not been clear on what constitutes unlawful sexual behaviour, and criminal liability is not consistent in relation to current knowledge about HIV and the risk of transmission.
Furthermore, I believe that the implementation of this legislation violates the fundamental principles of equality before the law. It seems as if the law is both random and unfair when only a few cases have been filed in recent years, despite the fact that several hundred people are diagnosed with HIV each year. It also seems unfair and counterproductive that all responsibility should rest on those of us who are familiar with our own HIV status, when we know that many are not aware of their own status and that new infections require HIV-negative individuals to choose to have unsafe sex.
In light of the increasing number of new HIV diagnoses among gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men, one can rightly ask what does that suggest for this law in terms of HIV prevention? My contention is that it has not served its purpose, whether viewed from a public health perspective or an individual prevention perspective. HIV is no longer a threat to public health, as one assumed it was going to be early in the 1980s. We have been aware of this for many years now. Even before effective treatment arrived, this was a fact. Nevertheless, it seems that the ‘epidemic’ mentality lingers in the minds of many people.
A public health perspective, however, is important when it comes to the spread of other communicable diseases through air, water and food. I have therefore, together with a committee unanimously decided that § 238 should be amended to apply only to such infections, see chapter 11 and the committee draft laws in Chapter 14
It is not through criminal law that we reduce the spread of HIV. I believe that HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are solely a health issue. That’s where the focus should and must be, if one wants to prevent more infections. This means that we must change our mindset and change our course from criminal regulation to a health-related approach. Both partners should be responsible for their own sexual health, but this should not be linked to punishment. I do not believe that criminal law is a suitable tool for regulating health-related behaviours. Using the Penal Code, however, can make it appear as if the Government has been pro-active on this issue when instead it actually creates a false sense of security.
Decriminalisation
I believe that one should not criminalise unprotected sex and consequently the transmission of sexually transmitted infections. In sexual relations between two equal partners who voluntarily decide to have sex, no heed is given to criminalisation / criminal law at home, regardless of whether HIV is transmitted or not. I believe that punishment should only be used in cases where you can prove that someone has intended to transmit a communicable disease and succeeded in doing this. Then the general provisions on bodily harm can be used, but in all other cases general laws on ‘offences against the person’ should not be used.
My suggestion therefore implies a clear decriminalisation, as I suggest that prosecutions should only occur where there is intent in the form of wilful intent and infection actually occurs. Transmission that occurs through dolus eventualis [recklessness] should, I suggest, not be prosecuted, even if infection actually occurs. This also applies to cases where there is only a negligent state of mind. If there has only been the potential for exposure, i.e. infection has not occurred, as I have already suggested, this should not be punished.
People with HIV – an untapped resource
Those of us who are living with HIV want to be involved in reducing infection rates. We want to be “part of the solution” and not be seen as a “problem”. Just as our society desires that all groups of patients are equal partners in health, I believe that people with HIV in particular are an important group to include. I think we are an untapped resource in prevention. We have unique knowledge in that can say something about why we were infected. This knowledge has so far not been made use of – no one asks us about possible underlying / contributory reasons why we were infected. Here, there is a great potential in terms of prevention of new infections, and we want to be involved in this work.
Common goals
Whatever we may think of the Penal Code as all actors within the HIV field (whether government, organisation or activist) a common goal is to prevent people from becoming infected with HIV.
How do we reach this goal? Measures should focus on the HIV-positive and HIV-negative. We must strengthen and set clear requirements for disease control. We need to improve the coping ability of all people living with HIV. We need more testing, more often. Those who are newly diagnosed who wish to start treatment should be allowed to do so. We need to focus on the importance of risk/harm reduction, and realise that it can make a substantial contribution to ‘traditional’ prevention. Doing even something right is better than doing nothing at all.
There is no reason that Norway might not become the best in the world in this area – we have the knowledge, skills and the economy. We have a clear situation, and we are able to reach everyone.
Sexually transmitted infections are a part of our shared reality. It’s not just HIV that is increasing in scope, but other infections. There are an increasing number of challenges, such as treatment-resistant gonorrhoea. We do not yet know the extent to which this will continue and what consequences will ensue. The more times a person is treated for a sexually transmitted infection, the greater the risk of complications or of developing resistance potentially resulting in a chronic condition. Although this information has reached the majority of the population it does not change the habit of having unprotected sex. We can surmise this from the ever increasing number of cases of sexually transmitted infections.
We should find a way to prepare a comprehensive plan as to how Norway should tackle all areas of sexual health. This plan must address both the dark and light sides of sexuality and must deal with sexuality throughout our life. Such a plan must aim to enhance the general population’s sexual health, while also dealing with special measures for vulnerable groups with special challenges, such as gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men, refugees, asylum seekers and their families.
This could be done by a committee that will have the mandate to prepare an action plan to enhance overall sexual health, including prevention of sexually transmitted infections. The current national strategic plan for improving sexual health is too one-sided by focusing on the prevention of unwanted pregnancies. Such a committee should have representatives of health authorities as well as representatives of relevant groups and relevant organisations.
National Action Plan
There are many HIV-positive people who believe that the National Action Plan ‘Acceptance and Coping, 2009-2014’ is a very important and appropriate plan for HIV prevention efforts. Here are six ministries and several agencies that are committed to comprehensive efforts in HIV-related work by defining objectives and strategic actions in a number of areas. Some of this is already implemented, but much remains to be done, and the recent mid-term conference showed that things are tough and that there is great frustration among the players.
What has been implemented includes the initiation of the first learning and activity courses for people with HIV. This course was developed through a partnership between The Health Information Centre and Department of Infectious Diseases, both at Oslo University Hospital, and the newly established Council for Patients with HIV has also contributed. Here, among other things, the mastery of sex life is an important part. This has been a successful pilot project that is supposed to be a constant for all who are living with HIV, and to all who are diagnosed with HIV, regardless of nationality, ethnicity and sexual orientation. We believe this is an important service for this patient group that until now has received little follow-up beyond the purely medical field. Another important measure implemented under the HIV plan is the training of health professionals who work with people with HIV to assist in their conversations with patients about changes in health-related behaviours, including sexual behaviour. The tool used is a method called motivational interviewing (MI) which increases the patient’s motivation to change. In 2011 almost 100 health professionals participated in such courses organised by the Directorate of Health. More such courses are needed, and these courses should be offered at different levels, so that MI is an integral part of care.
Such courses for both patients and healthcare providers is something that can increase both the efficacy and quality of life for people with HIV and are therefore very important health promotion and HIV prevention measures. Earlier initiation of treatment and increased focus on testing for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are other measures that work to prevent new infections.
Apart from the above-mentioned exceptions, very few of the other parts of the HIV plan have been completed. Why has this happened? Why has this work come to a standstill? Why have we not managed to achieve several more goals outlined in the plan? Is it due to a lack of real will of the health authorities and other ministries to drive this plan forward? Have they declared themselves satisfied with making a good plan, and then delegated the responsibility for implementation to civil society and health care providers? Success requires national management and monitoring.
The way forward – a new tool offers new opportunities
I believe we have a unique opportunity now to show other countries how HIV and other sexual transmitted infections can and should be dealt with in a constructive and inclusive manner. By focusing on sexual health in general, and for the whole population, we could experience a reduction of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. We must work to motivate and to inspire each individual and thus safeguard the best interests of society.
It’s a new era that should inspire all who live and work in this field. We know so much more now than when HIV was incorporated into the Penal Code. We have completely different opportunities today to fight this virus, by helping as many as possible to independently maintain their health. This is where we can help to reverse the negative trend we are experiencing nationally, and it will also give us an opportunity to show the way internationally. There are many eyes focused on Norway these days who are most interested in how we choose to move forward with this challenge. We have a responsibility to make this our opportunity to achieve the very best possible outcome.
HIV Criminalisation Survivors Speak Out: Human Rights Networking Zone Panel (AIDS 2012)
Panel session in the Human Rights Networking Zone at AIDS 2012 (25 July 2012)
Organizer: HIV Justice Network
Presenters:
– Edwin J Bernard, Co-ordinator, HIV Justice Network, United Kingdom
– Louis Gay, Deputy Chair, Patient Network for HIV, Norway [from 02:28]
– Robert Suttle, Assistant Director, The Sero Project, USA [from 10:19]
– Marama Pala, Executive Director, INA – Maori, Indigenous and Pacific Island HIV/AIDS Foundation, New Zealand [from 21:00]
Video produced by Nicholas Feustel, georgetown media,
for the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
Countries questioning laws that criminalize HIV transmission and exposure
On 17 February 2011, Denmark’s Minister of Justice announced the suspension of Article 252 of the Danish Criminal Code. This law is reportedly the only HIV-specific criminal law provision in Western Europe and has been used to prosecute some 18 individuals.
Brazil: Health ministry says no to criminalisation following two high-profile prosecutions
Brazil’s Ministry of Health is preparing a public statement in which it recommends that prosecutions for negligent or reckless HIV exposure or transmission cease. Rather, only intentional transmission where both intent and transmission are proven, in accordance with UNAIDS guidance, should ever be prosecuted. The statement follows two high-profile prosecutions in São Paulo.
I first heard of this yesterday when the legal correspondent of Veja Magazine, the largest circulation magazine in Brazil (and fourth largest in the world), contacted me for information about other countries’ approaches to criminalisation for an article she is writing about the issue.
She told me that the first prosecution actually took place in 2004, but that the case has become a national issue since the man’s retrial, which ended two weeks ago. The case involves a married man who was charged with attempted murder for not disclosing his HIV status to his mistress during their three year affair, and who subsequently tested HIV-positive. His wife of 25 years knew he was HIV-positive and they always used condoms, and she is not a complainant. In the first trial, the Grand Jury found him guilty of attempted murder and he was sentenced to eight years in prison. This was upheld on appeal, but a second appeal based on a legal technicality led to a second trial in which he was charged, and found guilty of, the lesser charge of assault and sentenced to two and half years – time he had already served.
A second case involves another heterosexual man who has also been charged with attempted murder for having unprotected sex without disclosure with three women, two of whom subsequently tested HIV-positive. This case is ongoing and awaiting a decision from the Supreme Court.
What is significant is that Brazil’s government appears to be on a collision course with the judiciary. Although my Veja correspondent was vague about the Ministry of Health’s statement (she had not yet been able to interview them), I found this report from Odia/Terra online published on Tuesday which includes a quote from the Ministry of Health’s Eduardo Barbosa
According to Eduardo Barbosa, Deputy Director of the Department of STD, AIDS and Hepatitis from the Ministry of Health, in order for HIV transmission to be considered a crime the court must, in addition to proving intent, consider the existence of “psychosocial factors”, the stage of treatment of disease and the responsibility of the partner to protect themselves.
A ministry statement goes against a global trend to criminalize those who transmit the disease, according to Barbosa. “Some countries end up adopting such measures as if it were possible to isolate and blame in order to control the epidemic.”
This fits well with Brazil’s history of focusing on a human rights approach to HIV. In fact, the government is about to pass a new (protective) law which will punish anyone who discriminates against someone with living with HIV with up to four years in prison.
Bill 6124/05 criminalises anyone who promotes any act of discrimination, exclusion or restriction of people living with HIV in schools and kindergartens; in the workplace; and in healthcare settings. It also criminalises third party disclosure of someone’s HIV-positive status in these settings.
O reporter.com reports that
Bill 6124/05 was approved unanimously today [17 November] by the Committee on Constitution and Justice (CCJ) of the House of Representatives. The approval of the project, which was approved by the rapporteur, Congressman Regis de Oliveira (PSC-SP), will benefit about 630 thousand infected in Brazil…
“Nearly a decade after we first attempted to pass this law, the House of Representatives is finally close to creating a law that punishes any act of distinction, exclusion or restriction to people who are HIV-positive,” said Regis de Oliveira. During the debate, the proposition, which is being handled in the Committee on Constitution and Justice (CCJ), had the support of most lawmakers…
“It is important that society should identify the various forms of discrimination in order to eliminate them, helping to respect, protect and fulfill human rights. Discrimination threatens the rights of these citizens live in dignity, so that often they become victims of irreversible psychological damage, ” he concludes.
The bill now goes to the vote on the House floor.
I should have more details on the cases and the government’s official response next week.
New Zealand: ‘HIV predator’ is named; seventh complainant adds further charges
The man dubbed the ‘HIV predator’ had his name and face splashed all over New Zealand’s media today in what has become the biggest criminal HIV transmission case in NZ history. There are now seven complainants (six men, one woman) of whom five are alleging that the man was source of their HIV infection.
As well as his name and several photos, today’s report on GayNZ.com includes many of the details left out of their earlier reporting, including his online dating profile nicknames and the name of the street he lived on in Auckland. They also highlight that HIV testing centres are anticipating a rise in HIV testing today and over the weekend as people recognise the man. But surely this is as much a ‘fishing expedition’ as a public health warning.
Today’s story on TVNZ.com includes a quote from Bruce Kilmister, chief executive of NZ’s PLHIV organisation, Body Positive
[Kilmister] said the alleged charges significantly changed a lot of people’s lives. “Everybody who has had an association with him in the past should come forward for a test. But it’s also a timely reminder that everybody has a responsibility to keep themselves safe and follow safe sex practice. HIV positive people have an added responsibility not to transmit the virus, and the best way they can do that is to have safe sex.”
To put the case into perspective, according to data from New Zealand’s Ministry of Health (AIDS New Zealand Issue 63 – March 2009 ) only 184 people were newly diagnosed with HIV in 2008 – of whom 91 were acquired via sex between men, but only 70% of these were acquired in New Zealand, most of whom lived in Auckland – and this was the highest number ever recorded. Since there are now five gay men (aged between 17 and 31) who claim the accused man infected them, this ‘cluster’ alone would represent around 8% of new diagnoses.
Adding to the panic is the 19 year-old female complainant (who has not tested positive). Between 1999-2008 there were only 52 women diagnosed with HIV that was heterosexually acquired in New Zealand. The TVNZ article continues
The fact a woman had allegedly been affected raised concerns the virus may have spread into the heterosexual community. “The reality is that most women think of the pill as the beginning and end of safe sex. It needs to be a message that goes right across the broad spectrum,” [said Kilmister.]
If this man is the source of five (or possibly more) infections, this certainly is a public health concern, and the criminal justice system involvement is, indeed, a result of the failure of public health. The call for new and better public health laws in New Zealand are understandable, and certainly would be better than the current system which required media and CJS intervention.
However, last year the NZ Ministry of Health published a study examining HIV prevalence in New Zealand, both diagnosed and undiagnosed (AIDS New Zealand Issue 62 – November 2008) which found a prevalence of 4.4% amongst men who have sex with men attending sexual health clinics, of whom only half were diagnosed. Undiagnosed people can’t disclose – and cannot be publically (or even privately) named and shamed as a way to warn others about specifically avoiding them. Undiagnosed people may also be having as much – or more – ‘promiscuous’ sex as the so-called ‘HIV predator’.
Earlier in the week, TVNZ ran an in-depth look at the case and interviewed Michael Stevens, the man who orginally brought the allegations to GayNZ.com and Simon Harger-Forde, director of HIV prevention at New Zealand AIDS Foundation. It makes for uncomfortable viewing by making patient confidentiality appear to be something bad, and conflating two issues (non-disclosure resulting in HIV exposure or transmisison being a criminally liable act and the lack of an effective public health response) without any examination of the issue of shared responsibility for sexual health. Only at the very end does Mr Harger-Forde say that laws don’t protect anyone, and that everyone should be using condoms.
Finally, an interesting blog posting from a feminist commentator, which highlights other concerns – that this case will end up leading to further stigmatisation of gay men and people living with HIV in New Zealand, and concludes:
Safe sex is crucial, of course, but it’s also crucial that the … case doesn’t become an exercise in victim-blaming, with homophobic overtones. And it’s also important that [his] behaviour doesn’t prompt a backlash against HIV positive people, who have the same needs for affection, companionship and intimacy as the rest of us.