The sun is setting over the palm trees, and we're finishing
up a wonderful, exhilirating and intense week in Bali
for the International Conference on AIDS in
Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP-9). For the first time, Asia Catalyst supported
a delegation of 9 Chinese AIDS activists, provided translation throughout, and
hosted events that brought Chinese and other Asian activists together at
meetings, at workshops, and at a beach barbecue party under the stars (do you
hate us yet?).
Chinese NGO Delegation
- To support the capacity development of the grassroots Chinese AIDS NGO
movement, Asia Catalyst assisted 9 AIDS activists to attend, including
representatives of Aizhixing Health Education
Institute, Dongzhen Human Rights
Education and Action Center, Ark of
Love, and Aibai. Two members of the
group assisted the others with translation, as did four Asia Catalyst staff and
volunteers. While some Chinese NGOs have recently been mired in conflict over
representation on China's
Country Coordinating Mechanism for the Global Fund, it was inspiring to see this
group of AIDS activists eating together, living together, working together and
helping one another to navigate the conference.
Presentations,
Reservations and Translations - Often at international conferences, Chinese
AIDS activists who lack strong English skills wind up sidelined and
marginalized. Asia Catalyst provided help in the months leading up to ICAAP to
members of the Chinese delegation in raising funds for and booking travel, and we helped to translate the paper
presentations and poster presentations at the conference. Tian Xi and Xu Haibo
were both attending their first international conferences, and both gave
memorable and courageous oral presentations on legal and human rights issues in
China's
response to the AIDS epidemic. Li Man, also at her first international
conference, gave a poster presentation on her work with sex workers in Yunnan. These sessions sparked
a great deal of interest from the audience. Chinese AIDs activists also had
questions and comments of their own for speakers from the UN, the Gates
Foundation, and others. (Our next blog will summarize what Chinese AIDS
activists had to say at ICAAP.) And Asia Catalyst staff had our own oral and poster presentations, on children's rights and media issues.
NGO Barbecue Party on
the Beach - As several of the Chinese AIDS activists put it, "All these
Asian AIDS NGOs seem to know each other really well, but the Chinese groups don't
know any of them". To help break down the barriers and help Chinese get to know their counterparts, Asia Catalyst joined with
Indonesian drug user human rights group IKON
Bali to host a barbecue party on Jimbaran beach for about 100 AIDS
activists, IDU and sex worker advocates, donors, and their friends. Over skewers
of grilled seafood, bottles of Bintang and group singing for a Cambodian and
Chinese AIDS activist who both happened to be celebrating birthdays this week,
the group connected in multiple languages.
Advocacy - Asia
Catalyst also hosted a satellite session at ICAAP, "Restrictions on AIDS NGOs
in Asia." The session followed our open letter
to UNAIDS chief Michel Sidibe signed by 30 NGOs on the chronic and widespread problems faced by
grassroots AIDS NGOs in many countries around the region. AIDS advocates from PT Foundation (Malaysia), Korsang
(Cambodia), and Dongzhen (China) spoke
about restrictions on everything from registering an NGO, to publishing
materials, to being evicted from offices, to police harassment some activists
face while doing outreach to sex worker and drug user communities in the
region. As Holly Bradford from Korsang put it, "It helps just to know we're not alone." We agreed to form a coalition that will join in advocating for the
rights of AIDS activists and frontline NGOs in Asia.
Some groups also expressed interest in sharing their experiences in getting human rights training to staff, volunteers and the communities we
serve.
Looking Forward -
In many ways, ICAAP was a trial run for us as we consider the prospect of
coordinating a delegation from China
to the International AIDS Conference in
2010. International meetings are a big commitment for a tiny group
like ours (we have one full-time and three part-time staff). To be frank, this was especially true in the case of ICAAP in Bali,
where despite high registration fees, the bureaucratic snafus by the conference coordinating agency in Jakarta were so numerous
that they almost merit a blog entry of their own. Our volunteers and part-time
staff spent many hours attempting to sort out
everything from messed-up hotel bookings, to lost per diem allowances, to mistaken
charges to our accounts, and more. On one memorable occasion, we went to the
airport to meet scholarship recipients after midnight, and took them to their
hotel, to find that the hotel had no record of their reservation - because in their wisdom, the ICAAP staff had changed their hotel bookings without notifying the scholars
(or us). It's things like this that make taking a delegation to a big
international meeting a quite serious investment of time and resources - time that
could be spent doing our other work in Asia.
At the same time, for grassroots Chinese groups, meetings
like ICAAP are a truly rare opportunity to transcend local barriers and
censorship, connect with new peers, learn about different strategies, and make new voices heard on the global stage. So, here we go Vienna (maybe after a quick nap on the beach).
I was at the Restrictions on NGOs in Asia session at ICAAP. It was a frustrating session to attend, because it seemed like all bad news; I know the news is bad, but there are also signs of movement and precedents for action in unexpected places, like Indonesia and Singapore, and even China. Despite that, I was really impressed by the work you're doing, and I came here looking for your Facebook page to pass on to my friends (found it!). I'm loving the blog, too - Meg and Josh do a terrific job of explaining some complex issues. Keep it up and best wishes!
I was at the Restrictions on NGOs in Asia session at ICAAP. It was a frustrating session to attend, because it seemed like all bad news; I know the news is bad, but there are also signs of movement and precedents for action in unexpected places, like Indonesia and Singapore, and even China. Despite that, I was really impressed by the work you're doing, and I came here looking for your Facebook page to pass on to my friends (found it!). I'm loving the blog, too - Meg and Josh do a terrific job of explaining some complex issues. Keep it up and best wishes!