[PRESS STATEMENT] Widespread medical discrimination against People Living with HIV/AIDS undermines the global fight against the disease

Bangkok, November 20th 2013

A coalition of international organisations call for an end to medical discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA).  Governments and civil society organizations meeting in Bangkok, Thailand this week for the International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP) should prioritise education and services to eliminate discrimination in health care provision.

U.S based Asia Catalyst, the China HIV/AIDS Community-Based Organization Network (CBO Network), the Women’s Network Against HIV/AIDS China (WNAC), the National Federation of Women Living with HIV/AIDS, Nepal (NFWLHA), Healthy Options Project Skopje (HOPS), Macedonia, Youth LEAD, Thailand, Kenya AIDS NGOs Consortium, Fundación para Estudio e Investigación de la Mujer-FEIM, Argentina, and AIDS Healthcare Foundation, Mexico urge governments in Asia take actions to address medical discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) today.

“Across Asia, people living with HIV/AIDS experience widespread discrimination in all spheres of life,” said Tingting Shen, Advocacy Director for Asia Catalyst.”Medical discrimination is one of the key factors preventing PLWHA from accessing critical life-saving treatment.”

The CBO Network has documented cases in China in which hospitals refuse to provide surgery to PLWHA.  WNAC has reported cases of positive pregnant women who were asked by their doctors to have an abortion.

“In China, there are laws and policies in place to protect PLWHA from discrimination, including the 2006 Regulation on HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control,” said Wang Baoyi, secretariat of the CBO Network. “But there has been little action or measures to ensure the implementation of these laws and policies.”

A 2009 survey conducted by UNAIDS, among more than 2000 PLWHA in China, found that 12% of interviewees reported discrimination in health care settings by health care providers. In Nepal, a 2011 survey conducted among 848 PLWHA found that 7.3 % of respondents had been denied health services, with an even higher proportion of sex workers and drug users  also experiencing denial of health services. NFWLHA has collected cases of positive women experiencing discrimination to prevent them from receiving PMTCT (Prevention of mother to child transmission).

“Medical practitioners in Nepal have negative attitudes towards women living with HIV/AIDS, as they associate HIV with immoral behavior, ” said Rishu Shrestha, project officer at NFWLHA. “The government should ensure that women living with HIV/AIDS  have access to life saving medical treatment without discrimination. ”

Across Asia People Living With HIV/AIDS are regularly turned away by hospitals when they are seeking medical services that address their health needs. Medical discrimination not only endangers the lives of PLWHA, it also violates their right to the highest attainable standard of health and increases stigma towards HIV/AIDS. This drives PLWHA, who are already marginalized, further underground to the point where they will not be willing to seek key HIV prevention, care and treatment services. This must change.

The coalition urged governments and other attendees at this year’s ICAAP to:

*   Protect the equal rights of PLWHA for treatment by developing and implementing laws and policies that prevent discrimination;

*   Fund programmes for medical practitioners to learn and disseminate knowledge of HIV/AIDS and standard precautions in health care settings to ensure that health care providers have appropriate protections when providing medical services;

*   Conduct education campaigns to the general public, to address ignorance and discrimination on HIV/AIDS.

For further information please contact:

Asia Catalyst, Advocacy Director- Shen Tingting (Chinese & English),+66 – 928108615 tshen@asiacatalyst.org

The China AIDS CBO Network, Secretariat -Wang Baoyi (Chinese), +66 – 908936816

NFWLHA, Project officer – Rishu Shrestha (Nepalese & English) , +977 – 9841489299

Download the full statement and view signatories here.


[PRESS STATEMENT] Chinese Government Denies Travel to Bangkok for AIDS Activist

Bangkok, 20 November, 2013

Yuan Wenli, a women’s rights and AIDS activist from China, was forced to cancel her plan to travel to Bangkok for this week’s International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP), due to the Chinese government’s cancellation of her passport, Asia Catalyst said today.

Mrs Yuan Wenli, a prominent AIDS activist from Zheng Zhou, Henan province, was stopped by customs officials at Guangzhou airport on November 15, 2013 and informed that her passport had been revoked by the local authorities. She was specifically told that she was not to go to Bangkok for ICAAP.

Yuan Wenli was due to participate at this year’s ICAAP where thousands of AIDS activists from across Asia are gathering in Bangkok this week. The Congress brings together policy makers, civil society, academics and relevant regional stakeholders to share information and discuss strategies to control the epidemic. Asia Catalyst had organised for Yuan Wenli to participate in a panel discussion and meeting with UN agencies and international organizations in Bangkok to share her experiences around documenting medical discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS in China.

“This is a great opportunity for me to meet with organizations from other countries, to learn their experiences and to show what we have achieved in China,” said Yuan Wenli. “But now I can do nothing but stay at home.”

Yuan Wenli’s case highlights ongoing restrictions on freedom of association and assembly for AIDS activists in China. Rights activists operate in a difficult and oppressive environment. Henan province, the home of Wenli, was the main site of China’s blood disaster in the 1990s, in which the HIV virus was transmitted to hundreds of thousands of citizens through unsafe blood transfusions and blood donations.

Decades later activists continue to advocate for accountability and
compensation for the victims, in an environment rife with police surveillance, arbitrary detention, arrest and harassment. It is difficult for activists to organize events and many meetings have been canceled by the authorities.

China’s Prime Minister Li Keqiang has stressed that “civil society
organizations play an important role in the response to HIV/AIDS. ”

“The cancellation of Yuan Wenli’s passport undermines efforts to strengthen community voices and build the leadership of civil society organizations, which is essential to an effective response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in China,” said Tingting Shen, Advocacy Director for Asia Catalyst. “We urge China to protect the right of expression and association for its citizens and to ensure a space for civil society leaders to have their voices heard.”

As the mother of an HIV positive child, Yuan Wenli founded Golden Sunshine in 2005, an organization that provides support to women and children living with HIV/AIDS. In 2010, she established the Henan Regional Network of Women Living with HIV/AIDS, the first regional network in China that builds the leadership of women in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Due to her leadership and commitment to women’s rights she was elected secretary of the Women’s Network Against AIDS China (WNAC) in 2012.

Asia Catalyst works with grassroots groups from marginalized communities in East and Southeast Asia that promote the right to health.

For further information on Yuan Wenli’s case, please see:

Why Deprive Me of My Right to Participation? Zhengzhou police revoked passport to prevent AIDS activist from participating in regional AIDS Congress. (Chinese and English:  https://goo.gl/y44NUi)

 

CONTACT:

Shen Tingting, Asia Catalyst Advocacy Director (Chinese
& English)

+66 – 92 810 8615 (until 22 November)

+86 -138 117 10833 (after 22 November)

tshen@asiacatalyst.org

——————–

Download the PDF of this Press Statement Here

 


Schedule of Asia Catalyst Events at ICAAP 11

From November 20th to 21st Asia Catalyst staff and delegates from four Chinese partner organizations will gather with other advocates from the region at the 11th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICCAP). Delegates will present their work, meet with advocacy targets, and attend community and scientific sessions. The congress, to be held in Bangkok, Thailand, is the largest forum on HIV/AIDS in the Asia-Pacific region.

———————————————————–

Will you be in Bangkok for ICAAP 11 or otherwise?

Check out our list of events, panels, roundtables, workshops and presentations.  Many events are free and open to the public, taking place in networking zones or our organizational booth inside the Asia Pacific Village, an area of the conference proceedings open to the public, and designed to include community groups.

Download our ICAAP schedule here.

(more…)


[FUNDING OPPORTUNITY] New Zealand Head of Mission Fund

(Crossposted from China Head of Mission Fund)
 
China Head of Mission Fund Deadline
 
The Head of Mission Fund (HOMF) for China is a small discretionary grant scheme managed by the New Zealand Embassy in Beijing.  The HOMF is a component of the New Zealand Aid Programme, the New Zealand Government’s international aid and development programme managed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT).
 
Applications for the next round of China Head of Mission Fund should be send to the New Zealand Embassy, Beijing before Friday 6 December 2013.
 
Guidelines and Application Form are available on the website below.
 
新西兰驻华大使馆大使基金本轮申请截止日期
 
大使基金(HOMF)是由新西兰驻华大使馆(北京)管理的小额赠款制度,是新西兰外交贸易部管理的政府国际援助和发展计划新西兰援助计划的一部分。
 
大使基金本轮申请截止日期为2013126日星期五,请在该日期之前将申请递交给新西兰驻华大使馆(北京)。
 
附件:大使基金申请指南与申请表。
 
Please note that applications may be completed in either Chinese or English. For more information please visit our website here for English or here for Chinese language.
请注意:申请表可以用中文或英文填写。如需了解更多信息,请访问我们的英文网址https://www.nzembassy.com/china/news/china-and-mongolia-head-of-mission-fund-deadlines-0或中文网址https://www.nzembassy.com/zh-hans/china/news/新西兰驻华大使馆大使基金本轮申请截止日期-0

Call For Applications: 亚洲促进会技术支持项目—-社区研究与倡导

亚洲促进会技术支持项目—-社区研究与倡导

Call for Applications: 

Asia Catalyst Technical Assistance Program — Community Research and Advocacy


 2013-2014年,亚洲促进会将面向中国的性工作者社区组织提供技术支持。我们欢迎那些希望记录社区问题,并开展倡导的性工作者机构进行申请。我们将提供培训和辅导,帮助机构开展社区研究,并一道合作推动问题的解决。

In 2013-14, Asia Catalyst will provide technical assistance to sex worker community organizations in China. We welcome sex worker organizations, that want to document community issues and conduct advocacy, to apply. We will provide training and coaching to assist selected organizations to conduct community research, and work together to conduct advocacy on the issue. 


本项目计划挑选两家性工作者社区组织,并在2013年12月至2014年7月之间提供三次面对面的培训。在这些培训的间隔,我们将通过电话和网络跟进。培训和辅导的内容包括:选择一个社区问题并确定倡导目标,社区研究和记录的基本技巧,制定和实施倡导计划。培训和辅导计划将根据社区组织的具体情况而定制。作为项目的一部分,这两家组织将在2014年7月份之前完成一份倡导计划和简短的社区问题报告。此外,亚洲促进会可能将选择其中一个组织参加于2014年7月在澳大利亚墨尔本召开的世界艾滋病大会,以分享其记录的社区问题和所开展的倡导。这将取决于奖学金申请及基金筹集的状况。

For this project Asia Catalyst will select two sex worker community organizations, and provide three face-to-face workshops by Asia Catalyst between December 2013 and July 2014. In between these trainings, we will provide coaching through telephone and internet. The skills the program aims to develop are: selecting a community issue and determining an advocacy goal; basics of community research and documentation; developing and implementing an advocacy plan. The training and coaching plan will be tailor-made based on the needs of the organization. As part of the project, the two organizations will develop an advocacy plan and a short report on the community issue before July 2014. In addition, Asia Catalyst may select one representative of the two organizations to attend the International AIDS Conference held in Melbourne, Australia in July 2014. This will depend on result of fundraising and scholarship application. 


      请注意,亚洲促进会承担所有培训和辅导的开支,并提供有限的访谈费用用于社区研究项目。除此之外,本项目不提供任何其他的拨款或补贴。项目进行过程中所有收集到的材料及报告均归该性工作者机构所有。在征得机构同意的情况下,亚洲促进会可能会使用这些材料和报告开展倡导。

Please note that Asia Catalyst will cover all the cost for the training, provide limited support for transportation allowance for interviewees as part of the community research project, and one scholarship for attending the International AIDS Conference. This program does not provide any other grant funds or compensation. All materials gathered by the sex worker organization will be the sole property of that organization. With the permission of the organization, Asia Catalyst may use these materials for the purpose of advocacy.


请感兴趣的组织填写申请表,并于2013年11月22日之前发送电子邮件到tshen@asiacatalyst.org。申请表已附加在邮件中,也可以在线获得:AdvoCoachingChinaSWapplicationNov2013.doc

Interested groups should fill out and email the application form in Chinese to tshen@asiacatalyst.org by November 22, 2013.  Download the application here: AdvoCoachingChinaSWapplicationNov2013.doc.