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International News
Advocates Discuss Travel Restrictions Around the World for People Living With HIV/AIDSAugust 6, 2008 HIV/AIDS advocates on Tuesday at the XVII International AIDS Conference in Mexico City discussed travel restrictions around the world for people living with HIV/AIDS, the AP/Los Angeles Times reports. Neither HHS nor CDC -- which is under the jurisdiction of HHS and would make recommendations about the travel restrictions -- commented on the provision last week, though advocates expressed hope that the ban would be repealed (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 7/31). According to Craig McClure, executive director of the International AIDS Society, China plans to lift its HIV/AIDS travel restrictions at a later date, and countries such as Russia and the United Arab Emirates are revising their policies. "The U.S. always sets the tone," McClure said, adding, "This is huge not only for the people who have not been able to enter the U.S., but finally these laws might be overturned throughout the world" (AP/Los Angeles Times, 8/5). In China, government "agencies, including the Ministry of Health and the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, have reached consensus on the issue," Hao Yang, deputy director of the ministry's disease control and prevention bureau, said. After performing the necessary administrative and legal procedures, "the HIV/AIDS restrictions will be lifted in 2009", he added (Shan, China Daily, 8/6). In his opening address at the conference, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the travel restrictions on people living with HIV "should fill us with shame." Ron MacInnis, policy director for IAS, said travel restrictions "imped[e] our ability to control HIV and AIDS" and compel HIV-positive people to conceal their status. He added that it is "blatantly discriminatory to single out people with HIV." UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot said there is no public health justification for the travel restrictions, adding that they undermine efforts to control HIV/AIDS by implying that the disease can be curbed with tight border restrictions (AP/Los Angeles Times, 8/5). Back to other news for August 2008
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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