Religious Leaders Call for Halt to Condom Distribution in Malawi Despite AIDS PandemicMay 27, 2003 A group of religious leaders in Malawi decided Monday to
lobby the government to halt condom distribution, despite the
AIDS pandemic that has hit the country. The religious leaders
said that the teachings of Christianity and Islam, the main
religions of Malawi, do not support the use of condoms. A joint
task force of government and religious leaders was established
two years ago to deal with the country's AIDS crisis. Geoffrey
Elliott Matonga, spokesperson for the group's religious leaders,
said they would lobby the government to ban the promotion of
condoms through advertisements on radio, television, newspapers
and posters. He said the task force would also lobby to
discourage donors from funding condom promotional campaigns.
Matonga called on the government to make HIV testing and
premarital counseling mandatory, and he noted that the Christian
Bible and the Islamic Quran preach abstinence and monogamy as
ways of preventing the spread of the disease. At least 14 percent
of Malawi's 11 million people have HIV.
Adapted from:Back to other CDC news for May 27, 2003 Associated Press 05.26.03; Raphael Tenthani This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
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