UNAIDS Reference Group on HIV and Human Rights updates statement on HIV testing to include the “key trend” of “prolific unjust criminal laws and prosecutions”

The UNAIDS Reference Group on HIV and Human Rights has updated its statement on HIV testing  — which continues to emphasise that human rights, including the right to informed consent and confidentiality, not be sacrifced in the pursuit of 90-90-90 treatment targets — in the light of “three key trends that have emerged since the last statement regarding HIV testing was issued by the UNAIDS Reference Group (in 2007).”

One of these is “prolific unjust criminal laws and prosecutions, including the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure, exposure, and transmission.” The other two involve the recognition that HIV treatment is also prevention, and policies that aim to “end the AIDS epidemic as a public health threat by 2030.”

This statement is an important policy document that can be used to argue that public health goals and human rights goals are not mutually exclusive.

The Reference Group was established in 2002 to advise the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) on all matters relating to HIV and human rights. It is also fully endorsed by by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Human Rights Reference Group.

This statement is issued at a time when UNAIDS and the Global Fund are renewing their strategies for 2016–2021 and 2017–2021, respectively.

To support these processes, the Reference Groups offer the following three key messages:

1. There is an ongoing, urgent need to increase access to HIV testing and counselling, as testing rates remain low in many settings. The Reference Groups support such efforts unequivocally and encourage the provision of multiple HIV testing settings and modalities, in particular those that integrate HIV testing with other services.

2. Simply increasing the number of people tested, and/or the number of times people test, is not enough, for many reasons. Much greater efforts need to be devoted to removing barriers to testing or marginalized and criminalized populations, and to link those tested with prevention and treatment services and successfully keep them in treatment.

3. Public health objectives and human rights principles are not mutually exclusive. HIV testing that violates human rights is not the solution. A “fast-track” response to HIV depends on the articulation of testing and counselling models that drastically increase use of HIV testing, prevention, treatment, and support services, and does so in ways that foster human rights protection, reduce stigma and discrimination, and encourage the sustained and supported engagement of those directly affected by HIV.

The section on HIV criminalisation is quoted below.

The criminalization of HIV non-disclosure, exposure, and transmission is not a new phenomenon, but the vigour with which governments have pursued criminal responses to alleged HIV exposures — at the same time as our understanding of HIV prevention and treatment has greatly advanced, and despite evidence that criminalization is not an effective public health response — causes considerable concern to HIV and human right advocates. In the last decade, many countries have enacted HIV-specifc laws that allow for overly broad criminalization of HIV non-disclosure, exposure, and transmission. This impetus seems to be “driven by the wish to respond to concerns about the ongoing rapid spread of HIV in many countries, coupled by what is perceived to be a failure of existing HIV prevention efforts.” In some instances, particularly in Africa, these laws have come about as a response to women being infected with HIV through sexual violence, or by partners who had not disclosed their HIV status.

Emerging evidence confrms the multiple implications of the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure, exposure, and transmission for HIV testing and counselling. For example, HIV criminalization can have the effect of deterring some people from getting tested and finding out their HIV status. The possibility of prosecution, alongside the intense stigma fuelled by criminalization, is good reason for some to withhold information from service providers or to avoid prevention services, HIV testing, and/or treatment. Indeed, in jurisdictions with HIV-specific criminal laws, HIV testing counsellors are often obliged to caution people that getting an HIV test will expose them to criminal liability if they find out they are HIV-positive and continue having sex. They may also be forced to provide evidence of a person’s HIV status in a criminal trial. This creates distrust in relationships between people living with HIV and their health care providers, interfering with the delivery of quality health care and frustrating efforts to encourage people to come forward for testing.

The full statement, with references, can be downloaded here and is embedded below.

HIV TESTING AND COUNSELLING: New technologies, increased urgency, same human rights

Sweden: HIV activists call for the abolition of the duty to disclose in line with scientific progress

The new knowledge we have today about the transfer risks, should contribute to a change in infectious disease control law design.

The duty to disclose for people living with HIV should be abolished as soon as possible, writes representatives from RFSL, RFSU and HIV Sweden.

HIV was included in the Swedish Communicable Diseases legislation in 1985. The purpose was to provide support for the measures it considered necessary to slow down the transmissions of HIV, an infection, they were convinced, that could become an epidemic out of control.

Despite the limited knowledge then available on HIV the Government noted in its preparatory work to the Act that: “If a cure is discovered meaning that infected people can become free of infection,  the perception of infectiousness willl obviously change. It would also be the same if one could find that the infection, whether a cure is available or not, is not contagious in some periods “(Prop. 1985/86: 13).

In October 2013 the Public Health Agency launched its knowledge base “Infectiousness in treated HIV infection.” The Authority concluded that the risk of transmitting HIV through sexual contact when a condom is used, is almost non-existent.

The risk is also considered as very small if a condom is not used.

In Sweden, over 90 percent of those who received a hiv diagnosis are on effective treatment today. In accordance with the intentions that were in the preparatory work to the country legislation in 1985, the knowledge we now have about transmission risks, should contribute to a change in infectious disease control law design.

One of the positions that RFSL, RFSU and HIV Sweden usually get to explain is precisely why we believe that the so-called disclosure duties should be removed for people living with HIV.

The duty to disclose is one of several precautions that people living with HIV must follow under the current disease control legislation. The duty to disclose requires that people living with HIV must inform their sex partners of their HIV.

he duty to disclose takes the focus away from what is hiv prevention most central message: that all people in sexual encounters should take responsibility to protect themselves and their partners.

So under the legislation this responsibility rests with the party who knows about his/her HIV as the duty to disclose. This despite the fact that over 90 percent of those currently living with HIV are taking effective treatment and are exposing a sexual partner to an almost non-existent risk of HIV transmission.

It stands in stark contrast to the fact that in most cases, it is those who do not know they have HIV who transmit the virus to others. The highest risk of transmission comes from this undiagnosed population.

This group is of course under no obligation to disclose information about which they know nothing, and therefore does not have anything to tell. The duty to disclose is therefore counterproductive and contributes to the stigmatization of people living with HIV who know about their status.

RFSL, RFSU and HIV Sweden are calling for a revision of regulations of the 2004 Infectious Diseases Act and the abolition of the duty to disclose.

We have met with opposition within the authorities, medical officers, their lawyers and policymakers. Often we are subjected to the view that we do not fully understand how the law works and a belief that we want to bring HIV out of the Communicable Diseases Act. That is not the case.

We believe that HIV must be included in the Communicable Diseases Act from a prevention and treatment perspective. But we believe that the law can easily be designed in such a way that HIV, and any other relevant diseases, are excluded from a conduct that is counter-productive, which departs from Prevention key messages, which stigmatizes people living with HIV, and is not in line with the knowledge we have today about transmission risks.

To make it easier for policy makers and officials, we have in collaboration with lawyers developed an example of how Diseases Act may be formulated to overcome the misconceptions there may seem to be about our position. The example can be downloaded here.

It is now our hope that the government ensures that the revision of the Infectious Diseases Act be implemented promptly and that the duty to disclose for people living with HIV can thus be abolished in the near future.

Christian Antoni Möllerop

Vice ‘Union

RFSL

 

Kristina Ljungros

Chairman of the Federation

RFSU

 

Christina Franzen

President

HIV Sweden

—————————————–

Den nya kunskap vi i dag har om överföringsrisker, bör bidra till en förändring av smittskyddslagstiftningens utformning.

Informationsplikten för personer som lever med hiv bör avskaffas snarast, skriver representanter från RFSL, RFSU och Hiv-Sverige.

1985 inkluderades hiv i den svenska smittskyddslagstiftningen. Syftet var att ge stöd till de åtgärder man ansåg nödvändiga för att bromsa överföringarna av hiv, en infektion man då var övertygad om att kunde bli en epidemi utom all kontroll.

Trots den begränsade kunskap som då fanns om hiv konstaterade regeringen i förarbetena till lagen att: ”Om något botemedel upptäcks som innebär att den smittade kan bli smittfri, kommer detta självklart att ändra synen på när smittsamhet föreligger. Detsamma blir förhållandet om man skulle finna att infektionen, oavsett om något botemedel finns att tillgå eller ej, inte är smittsam i vissa perioder” (Prop. 1985/86:13).

I oktober 2013 lanserade Folkhälsomyndigheten kunskapsunderlaget “Smittsamhet vid behandlad hivinfektion”. Där slår myndigheten fast att risken för att överföra hiv genom sexuell kontakt vid välfungerande behandling, när kondom används, är närmast obefintlig.

Risken bedöms även som mycket liten om kondom inte används.

I Sverige har över 90 procent av de som fått en hivdiagnos en välfungerande behandling i dag. I enlighet med de intentioner som fanns i förarbetena till smittskyddslagstiftningen från 1985, måste därför den kunskap vi nu har om överföringsrisker, bidra till en förändring av smittskyddslagstiftningens utformning.

 

Ett av de ställningstaganden som RFSL, RFSU och Hiv-Sverige oftast får förklara är just varför vi anser att den så kallade informationsplikten borde tas bort för personer som lever med hiv.

Informationsplikten är en av flera förhållningsregler som personer som lever med hiv måste följa enligt den gällande smittskyddslagstiftningen. Informationsplikten kräver att den som lever med hiv ska informera sina sexpartners om sin hiv.

Informationsplikten tar bort fokus från det som är hivpreventionens mest centrala budskap: att samtliga personer i det sexuella mötet bär ansvaret för att skydda sig själv och sin partner.

Så som lagstiftningen är utformad vilar ansvaret på den av parterna som vet om sin hiv att informera. Detta trots att över 90 procent av dem som i dag lever med hiv har en välfungerande behandling och därmed utsätter sexpartners för en närmast obefintlig risk för hivöverföring.

Det står i stark kontrast till det faktum att det är de som inte vet om att de bär på hiv som överför viruset i de flesta fall till andra. Det är alltså dessa odiagnostiserade det finns en stor risk att få viruset överfört från.

För denna grupp gäller förstås ingen informationsplikt då de inget vet och därför heller inte har något att berätta. Informationsplikten är därför kontraproduktiv och den bidrar till att stigmatisera personer som lever med hiv och vet om sin status.

 

RFSL, RFSU och Hiv-Sverige har sedan informationsplikten lagreglerades 2004 jobbat för en översyn av smittskyddslagen och ett avskaffande av informationsplikten.

Vi har stött på patrull inom myndigheter, smittskyddsläkare, deras jurister och bland beslutsfattare. Ofta bemöts vi av en uppfattning om att vi inte helt har förstått hur lagen fungerar eller en övertygelse om att vi vill ta hiv ut ur smittskyddslagen. Så är inte fallet.

Vi anser att hiv måste ingå i smittskyddslagen ur ett preventions- och behandlingsperspektiv. Men vi anser att lagen enkelt kan utformas på så sätt att hiv, och eventuellt andra relevanta sjukdomar, undantas från de förhållningsregler som är kontraproduktiva, som frångår det som är preventionens centrala budskap, som stigmatiserar personer som lever med hiv, och som inte ligger i linje med den kunskap vi numera har om överföringsrisker.

För att underlätta för beslutsfattare och tjänstemän har vi i samarbete med jurister tagit fram ett exempel på hur smittskyddslagen kan formuleras för att råda bot på de missuppfattningar om vårt ställningstagande som kan synas finnas. Exemplet kan laddas ner här.

Det är nu vår förhoppning att regeringen ser till att en översyn av smittskyddslagen sker skyndsamt och att informationsplikten för personer som lever med hiv därmed kan avskaffas inom en nära framtid.

Christian Antoni Möllerop

Vice förbundsordförande

RFSL

Kristina Ljungros

Förbundsordförande

RFSU

Christina Franzén

Ordförande

Hiv-Sverige

Nigeria: The Ondo State government has announced the commencement of the implementation of its HIV Anti-stigma law which prescribed a 10 year jail term, fine of N500,000 or both for any person who by whatever means transmits HIV to another person

Akure – The Ondo State government has announced the commencement of the implementation of its HIV Anti-stigma law which prescribed a 10 year jail term, fine of N500,000 or both for any person who by whatever means transmits HIV to another person.

Giving details of the law, which was signed last year, the Secretary to the State Government and Chairman, Ondo State Agency for the Control of AIDS, Dr. Aderotimi Adelola, said stigmatization and discrimination discourages people infected with and affected by HIV from accessing health and social services.

The law stipulates further that anybody who discriminates against people living with HIV commits an offence and is liable to fine of N100,000.00 or imprisonment of six months or both.

He spoke in Akure while delivering a keynote address at a sensitization programme to facilitate and ensure the enforcement of a law for the prevention of the spread of HIV and AIDS, elimination of discrimination and stigmatization of people living with HIV and “other matters incidental thereto or connected therewith.”

Adelola said most times the rights of people living with HIV are violated, causing them to suffer both the burden of the disease and the consequential loss of other rights.

World Health Organization publishes analysis of impact of overly broad HIV criminalisation on public health

A new report from the World Health Organization, Sexual Health, Human Rights and the Law, adds futher weight to the body of evidence supporting arguments that overly broad HIV criminalisation does more harm than good to the HIV response.

Drawing from a review of public health evidence and extensive research into human rights law at international, regional and national levels, the report shows how each country’s laws and policies can either support or deter good sexual health, and that those that support the best public health outcomes “are [also] consistent with human rights standards and their own human rights obligations.”

The report covers eight broad areas relating to sexual health, human rights and the law, including: non-discrimination; criminalisation; state regulation of marriage and family; gender identity/expression; sexual and intimate partner violence; quality of sexual health services; sexuality and sexual health information; and sex work.

The authors of the report note that it provides “a unique and innovative piece of research and analysis. Other UN organizations are examining the links between health, human rights and the law: the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP’s) Global Commission on HIV and the Law published its report in 2012, and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and United Nations Special Rapporteurs regularly report to the Human Rights Council on the impact of laws and policies on various aspects of sexual health. Nevertheless, this is the first report that combines these aspects, specifically with a public health emphasis.”

The points and recommendations made relating to overly broad HIV criminalisation (italicised for ease of reference) are included in full below.

Executive Summary: The use of criminal law (page 3)

All legal systems use criminal law to deter, prosecute and punish harmful behaviour, and to protect individuals from harm. However, criminal law is also applied in many countries to prohibit access to and provision of certain sexual and reproductive health information and services, to punish HIV transmission and a wide range of consensual sexual conduct occurring between competent persons, including sexual relations outside marriage, same-sex sexual behaviour and consensual sex work. The criminalization of these behaviours and actions has many negative consequences for health, including sexual health. Persons whose consensual sexual behaviour is deemed a criminal offence may try to hide it from health workers and others, for fear of being stigmatized, arrested and prosecuted. This may deter people from using health services, resulting in serious health problems such as untreated STIs and unsafe abortions, for fear of negative reactions to their behaviour or health status. In many circumstances, those who do access health services report discrimination and ill treatment by health-care providers.

International human rights bodies have increasingly called for decriminalization of access to and provision of certain sexual and reproductive health information and services, and for removal of punishments for HIV transmission and a wide range of consensual sexual conduct occurring between competent persons. National courts in different parts of the world have played an important role in striking down discriminatory criminal laws, including recognizing the potentially negative health effects.

3.4.5 HIV status (pages 22-23)

Although being HIV-positive is not itself indicative of sexual transmission of the infection, individuals are often discriminated against for their HIV-positive status based on a presumption of sexual activity that is often considered socially unacceptable.

In addition, in response to the fact that most HIV infections are due to sexual transmission, a number of countries criminalized transmission of, or exposure to, HIV, fuelling stigma, discrimination and fear, and discouraging people from getting tested for HIV, thus undermining public health interventions to address the epidemic.

Even where persons living with HIV/AIDS may be able, in principle, to access health services and information in the same way as others, fear of discrimination, stigma and violence may prevent them from doing so. Discrimination against people living with HIV is widespread, and is associated with higher levels of stress, depression, suicidal ideation, low self-esteem and poorer quality of life, as well as a lower likelihood of seeking HIV services and a higher likelihood of reporting poor access to care.

HIV transmission has been criminalized in various ways. In some countries criminal laws have been applied through a specific provision in the criminal code and/or a provision that allows for a charge of rape to be escalated to “aggravated rape” if the victim is thought to have been infected with HIV as a result. In some cases, HIV transmission is included under generic crimes related to public health, which punish the propagation of disease or epidemics, and/or the infliction of “personal injury” or “grievous bodily harm”.

Contrary to the HIV-prevention rationale that such laws will act as a deterrent and provide retribution, there is no evidence to show that broad application of the criminal law to HIV transmission achieves either criminal justice or public health goals. On the contrary, such laws fuel stigma, discrimination and fear, discouraging people from being tested to find out their HIV status, and undermining public health interventions to address the epidemic. Thus, such laws may actually increase rather decrease HIV transmission.

Women are particularly affected by these laws since they often learn that they are HIV-positive before their male partners do, since they are more likely to access health services. Furthermore, for many women it is either difficult or impossible to negotiate safer sex or to disclose their status to a partner for fear of violence, abandonment or other negative consequences, and they may therefore face prosecution as a result of their failure to disclose their status. Criminal laws have also been used against women who transmit HIV to their infants if they have not taken the necessary steps to prevent transmission. Such use of criminal law has been strongly condemned by human rights bodies.

Various human rights and political bodies have expressed concern about the harmful effects of broadly criminalizing the transmission of HIV. International policy guidance recommends against specific criminalization of HIV transmission. Human rights bodies as well as United Nations’ specialized agencies, such as UNAIDS, have stated that the criminalization of HIV transmission in the instance of intentional, malicious transmission is the only circumstance in which the use of criminal law may be appropriate in relation to HIV. States are urged to limit criminalization to those rare cases of intentional transmission, where a person knows his or her HIV-positive status, acts with the intent to transmit HIV, and does in fact transmit it.

Human rights bodies have called on states to ensure that a person’s actual or perceived health status, including HIV status, is not a barrier to realizing human rights. When HIV status is used as the basis for differential treatment with regard to access to health care, education, employment, travel, social security, housing and asylum, this amounts to restricting human rights and it constitutes discrimination. International human rights standards affirm that the right to non-discrimination includes protection of children living with HIV and people with presumed same-sex conduct. Human rights standards also disallow the restriction of movement or incarceration of people with transmissible diseases (e.g. HIV/AIDS) on grounds of national security or the preservation of public order, unless such serious measures can be justified.

To protect the human rights of people living with HIV, states have been called on to implement laws that help to ensure that persons living with HIV/AIDS can access health services, including antiretroviral therapy. This might mean, as in the case of the Philippines, for example, explicitly prohibiting hospitals and health institutions from denying a person with HIV/AIDS access to health services or charging them more for those services than a person without HIV/AIDS (167).

International guidance also suggests that such laws should be consistent with states’ international human rights obligations and that instead of applying criminal law to HIV transmission, governments should expand programmes that have been proven to reduce HIV transmission while protecting the human rights both of people living with HIV and those who are HIV-negative.

3.6 Legal and policy implications (pages 29-30)

5. Does the state consider that establishing and applying specific criminal provisions on HIV transmission can be counter-productive for health and the respect, protection and fulfilment of human rights, and that general criminal law should be used strictly for intentional transmission of HIV?

The full report can be downloaded from the WHO’s Sexual and Reproductive Health website.

US : Mississippi lawmakers pass law mandating HIV testing for anyone arrested for sexual assault

Updated by Paul Boger at Law enforcement officers will soon be able to do mandatory AIDS testing on those arrested for sexual assault. House Bill 2-57 was passed by lawmakers with nearly unanimous support in Mississippi’s House and Senate. The measure gives law enforcement the right to test individuals arrested for sexually assaulting a minor for diseases such as HIV and AIDS.

Under current Mississippi law, testing can only be conducted after a person has been convicted of a crime. Proponents say the new law will help young victims know if they’ve been exposed to a terrible disease. Republican Representative Mark Formby of Picayune helped draft the law. He says the test would become part of the intake process.

“If you’re arrested and you get photographed; it is not any additional evasive behavior,” says Formby. “We are documenting that you were arrested, which means that there was some degree of evidence that implicated you in a crime.”

Despite the measure’s popularity among lawmakers, some groups like the ACLU of Mississippi believe the law is a slippery slope.

Keia Johnson is the organization’s legislative strategist. She says the law amounts to an unreasonable search and seizure.

“We believe that when you mandate that DNA is to be collected for HIV testing purposes or anything like that upon arrest, that you are violating the due process of law,” Johnson says.

According to Representative Formby, both the suspect and the victim will be given the results of the test 24 hours after it was taken. At that time, all other DNA samples would be destroyed.

Antigua & Barbuda: 'Intentional HIV spread' rumours lead to calls for HIV-specific criminal law

The head of a local HIV/AIDS advocacy group is calling for residents to be more mindful of their sexual behaviour amidst rumors that people are intentionally spreading the HIV virus to others. The advice comes from Executive Director of the Antigua & Barbuda HIV/AIDS Network Inc (ABHAN) Eleanor Frederick.

“We cannot stop sending the message out there that HIV is alive and well and that we have to protect ourselves,” she said.

“Each person must take responsibility. First know their status and know their partner’s status. Use protection.”

An email to OBSERVER media from the Attorney General’s office stated that the Minster, Steadroy “Cutie” Benjamin, was recently presented with information to suggest that several residents have been intentionally infecting others with HIV.

In light of the allegations, an anonymous group of concerned citizens have called on Benjamin to enact laws to hold the culprits accountable.

“The group said that such vicious actions, in their estimation, is a matter of national security, and many lives are at risk and action needs to be taken soonest,” the missive read.

Benjamin, who is the country’s national security minister said he has promised that further research will be done to see what laws can be introduced to deal with the situation.

He is calling on members of society to protect themselves.

Frederick said she would support any move to criminalise the intentional spread of HIV/AIDS.

“I think it’s something that needs to be looked at. It’s not always a deterrent because when people are intent they couldn’t care less. There are those that decide they’re going to infect someone no matter what and there are others who will think twice about it, so we have to put something there,” she said.

Several countries across the world already have legislation condemning the intentional or reckless infection of another person with the HIV virus.

Some areas of the US have enacted laws expressly to criminalize HIV transmission or exposure, charging those accused with criminal transmission of HIV.

Others, including the United Kingdom, charge the accused under existing laws with crimes such as murder, manslaughter, attempted murder, or assault.

Kenya: Mandatory HIV reporting directive challenged as unconstitutional and a violation of people's rights

A directive by President Uhuru Kenyatta requiring the compilation of a report on all school children living with HIV and Aids has been challenged in court. The petitioners: Kenya Legal and Ethical Issues Network (Kelin), Children of God Relief Institute (Nyumbani) and two other parties, are apprehensive that compiling such a list violates the law and stigmatises the people living with HIV. High Court judge Mumbi Ngugi certified the matter as urgent and directed that the parties file and serve the relevant documents before the matter is heard tomorrow. The directive issued by the President on February 23 requires county commissioners and the ministries of Health, Education and Interior to collect up to date data and prepare a report on all school children living with HIV and information on their guardians. The directive further calls for information on expectant women and breastfeeding mothers who are HIV-positive. The petitioners stated that the Government agencies had proceeded to implement the directive without consulting people living with the virus, which they say contradicts Article 10 of the Constitution. See also: Leaders dismiss claims of ‘Kiambu-mafia’ machinations “The method of data collection under the said directive is prejudicial to the rights of the people living with HIV,” said Allan Maleche, the executive director at Kelin. He also said the National Aids Control Council (NACC) are holding the names illegally while implementing the president’s directive. Achesa stated in a sworn affidavit that the ministries had continued implementing the directive despite numerous advisory notes from his organisation, constitutional commissions and networks of people living with HIV. He added that a letter sent to the President on March 11 and a follow-up letter two weeks later were yet to be responded to. They now want the court to declare the directive unconstitutional and a violation of people’s rights. They also want the ministries and NACC to be compelled to destroy or codify all data in their possession collected as a result of the directive.

Read more at: http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2000165780/president-uhuru-kenyatta-s-order-on-hiv-data-challenged-in-court

Nigeria: Senate passes law criminalising HIV non-disclosure, exposure and transmission with vague and overly broad statutes in the Sexual Offences Bill

Yesterday, Wednesday, June 3, the Sexual Offences Bill, sponsored by Senator Christiana Anyanwu, (pictured above) was passed by the Nigerian Senate.

The new law contains a number of problematic provisions relating to “HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease(s)” that were added between the 2012 draft and the 2013 draft that became law yesterday, notably:

  • Section 24 (Deliberate transmission of HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease) and
  • Section 39 (Intentional and unlawful acts)

Section 39 is actually much more of a concern, as it essentially frames non-disclosure of HIV (or any other ‘life-threatening STI, including, potentially, ebola) as sexual assault, because it is seen as fraud vitiating consent to otherwise consensual sex.

39. (1) An act is intentional and unlawful if it is committed. b) under false pretences or by fraudulent means.

(3) False pretences or fraudulent means, referred to in sub-section (1) (b), include circumstances where a person

(c) intentionally fails to disclose to the person in respect of whom an act which causes penetration is being committed, that he or she is infected by HIV or any other life-threatening sexual transmissible disease.

This is similar to – but much worse than – the current legal framework in Canada but without any defence relating to the risk of exposure, such as type of sexual act, condom use, or use of treatment as prevention.

One might argue that Section 24 (Deliberate transmission of HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease) isn’t as problematic, because it appears, at first glance, to only criminalise “intentionally, knowingly and willfully” transmitting HIV, which is in accordance with UNAIDS guidance.

However, similar to many other overly broad HIV criminalisation statutes across sub-Saharan Africa, under 24. (1) no transmission is necessary (or at least doesn’t need to be proven); it includes some very vague states of mind (“which he or she knows or ought to reasonably know“); and it is unclear what, if any, defences are allowed.

24. (1) Any person who, having actual knowledge that he or she is infected with HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease intentionally, knowingly and willfully does anything or permits the doing of anything which he or she knows or ought to reasonably know

(a) will infect another person with HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease;

(b) is likely to lead to another person being infected with HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease;

(c) will infect another person with any other sexually transmitted disease,

shall be guilty of an offence, whether or not he or she is married to that other person, and shall be liable, upon conviction, to imprisonment for a term of not less than twenty years but which may be enhanced to imprisonment for life.

In addition, under 24 (7) anyone accused or convicted of any of the offences covered in the Act (rape, sexual assault, indecent acts, child-related offences, exploitation of prostitution, incest, indecent exposure, sexual harassment, administering a substance with intent) will be tested for HIV (or other life-threatening STIs) and if found to be positive – whether or not they were aware of their infection – will have have their prison sentence enhanced to 15 years to life.

(7) Where a person is convicted of any offence under this Act and it is proved that at the time of the commission of the offence, the convicted person was infected with HIV or any other life threatening sexually transmitted disease whether or not he or she was aware of his or her infection, not withstanding any other sentence in this Act, he or she shall be liable upon conviction to imprisonment for a term of not less than fifteen years but which may be enhanced to imprisonment for life.

Two states in Nigeria – Enugu and Lagos – currently have overly broad HIV-specific criminal laws. It is not, however, clear whether this new law will override these laws and be binding on all 36 states in the Nigerian federation.

Research undertaken by the Network of People Living with HIV and AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWHAN) in 2010 found no known documented arrests or prosecutions at that time.

In 2013, when sentencing a 21 year-old teacher with HIV who was prosecuted for eloping with, impregnating and allegedly infecting, a 15 year-old former pupil, a Masaka High Court (in Nasarawa state) judge noted during sentencing that it is “common for people with HIV to maliciously infect others”.

In 2013, NEPWHAN and other civil society advocates successfully argued against the inclusion of a paragraph on “willful and deliberate spread of HIV” in the draft Anti HIV Discrimination Bill.

The HIV/AIDS Anti-Discrimination Act 2014 was finally passed earlier this year, and praised by UNAIDS and advocates for people living with HIV in Nigeria with the expectation that it would “create a more supportive environment, allowing people living with HIV to carry on their lives as normally as possible.”

However, the inclusion of the problematic provisions of the Sexual Offences Bill appears to have happened under the radar.  Since the 2012 draft contained none of these provisions, they were likely added in 2013, when the draft Anti HIV Discrimination Bill was being discussed.

In one fell swoop 13% of all people living with HIV in the world are now potentially unjustly criminalised.

The full text of the law  – one of 46 laws passed in 10 minutes yesterday according to media reports – is below.

Nigeria: Sexual Offences Bill 2015

US: Texas 'HIV criminalization bill' defeated

Despite some last-minute legal wrangling, the Texas legislature failed to pass several anti-gay measures as of the May 27 final deadline for passing any bills that lawmakers wish to see enacted into law. This year’s legislative session ends on June 1….

The legislature also failed to approve an HIV criminalization bill, which would have allowed prosecutors to subpoena the medical records and HIV test results of defendants living with HIV if prosecutors believe that they intended to intentionally infect people. The measure would have protected anybody who releases or discloses a test result in response to a subpoena from any liability, either civil or criminal, or any professionally disciplinary action.

According to LGBT and HIV/AIDS advocates, the bill was unnecessary, as Texas law already allows law enforcement and public safety officials to conduct HIV testing on individuals when appropriate, but there are privacy measures to keep the tests confidential. The advocates claimed the bill would have allowed an HIV-positive test result to be subpoenaed and used in any criminal proceeding against a person who happens to live with HIV, and was subjective, based on the personal whims and discretion of individual prosecutors.

The Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation’s top LGBT rights organization, worked with Legacy Community Health of Houston to oppose the HIV criminalization measure, saying revealing the results of an HIV test could potentially bias criminal proceedings, lead to enhanced privacy, and could discourage other people from getting tested for HIV for fear that a positive result would not be kept private and could be used against them.

“The defeat of SB 779 ensures that Texans living with HIV are not further stigmatized and penalized for their positive status,” Januari Leo, the director of public affairs with Legacy Community Health, said in a statement. “HIV is a public health issue that must be addressed through testing, treatment and prevention methods, not criminal prosecutions. HIV is neither a crime nor a death sentence.”

Australia: Victoria’s HIV-specific criminal law, Section 19A, finally repealed today

In a joint media release, Living Positive Victoria and the Victorian AIDS Council have welcomed the passage of the Crimes Amendment (Repeal of Section 19A) Act 2015 by the Victorian Parliament. The Act repeals Australia’s only HIV-specific law criminalising the intentional transmission of HIV, section 19A of the Crimes Act 1958, which has been criticised for unfairly targeting and stigmatising people with HIV.

Live Tweets from Victoria’s Parliament today. To find out more about the five year campaign to repeal the law, read this blog post written for the HIV Justice Network by Paul Kidd, Chair of the HIV Legal Working Group.

The two organisations had called for the repeal of section 19A in the lead-up to the 2014 International AIDS Conference, held in Melbourne, as part of an advocacy effort designed to reduce the incidence of HIV-related criminal prosecutions in Victoria.

“Victoria has the unfortunate distinction of having had more HIV-related prosecutions than any other state, and until today had the only HIV-specific criminal law,” said Simon Ruth, Chief Executive Officer, Victorian AIDS Council. “Our organisations strongly believe that HIV should be treated as a health issue, and that criminal prosecutions should only be used in cases where transmission occurs and there is evidence the alleged perpetrator acted with intent.”

The use of the criminal law to control HIV has been roundly criticised by legal theorists, HIV experts and international agencies. The Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS has called for HIV-specific criminal laws, like section 19A, to be repealed.

“Today we can be proud that Victoria has repealed its HIV-specific criminal law, and in doing so, reaffirmed its commitment to treating HIV as a public health issue and not a criminal justice issue. Government, community and industry need to work together if we are to meet our goal of eliminating HIV transmissions by 2020, and the multi-party support for repealing section 19A shows our legislators are listening and prepared to enact evidence-based policies,” said Brent Allan, Chief Executive Officer, Living Positive Victoria.

The repeal of section 19A will not legalise the intentional transmission of HIV, but will ensure that any allegation of intentional transmission is dealt with under general laws, the same as for other forms of injury. The campaign to repeal the laws highlighted the stigmatising effect of HIV criminalisation.

“Criminalising HIV transmission and exposure isn’t just ineffective as a method of prevention, it is actually counterproductive to our efforts because it perpetuates stigma,” said Paul Kidd, Chair of the HIV Legal Working Group. “We know the stigma around HIV is one of the biggest barriers to increasing testing and treatment, and enabling voluntary disclosure of HIV. Section 19A sent a false message that people with HIV are a danger to the community, and todays repeal shows the Parliament accepts that we are not.

“This is a law that was never needed, and should never have been enacted. It has not made Victorians safer, and in fact may have led to an increase in the number of people living with HIV. The whole Victorian community should be happy to see it go.”

The HIV Legal Working Group has been the recipient of GLOBE, VAC and Living Positive Victoria awards for its work on the repeal of section 19A. A community celebration of the repeal of section 19A is being planned and will be announced shortly.

In a blog post written exclusively for the HIV Justice Network, Paul Kidd highlights that although this battle has been won, the work against unjust prosecutions in Victoria is yet not over.

“Now that section 19A is gone, our work continues, he writes. “We still need to address the unacceptably high number of prosecutions for ‘HIV endangerment’ that occur in Victoria. We strongly believe we have a model that will deliver the right public health outcomes while safeguarding the public, without the use of expensive, ineffective and highly stigmatising criminal prosecutions. With the repeal of section 19A, our state government has recommitted itself to a health-based response to HIV, and we believe that gives us the best possible platform to continue our campaign for prosecutorial guidelines.”