“我们感觉很骄傲” — 访问泰国性工作者机构EMPOWER

By Carol Wang
EMPOWER:”我们是性工作者。我们用自己的智慧和技巧挣钱。我们感到很骄傲,因为我们能够用自己的劳动所得去支持自己的家庭和生活。我们在工作中相互照顾;我们 为安全的工作条件、平等的待遇和权利而奋斗。我们为泰国的经济发展做出了很大贡献,很多游客为我们而来。我们也是活跃的公民,我们关心政治、经济、环境、法律、权利,等等。我们努力在社会中占有一席之地,发出自己的声音。有些人认为我们是麻烦的制造者,但实际上我们在帮助社会解决问题。我们是性工作者,我们是EMPOWER。”

In Memoriam: Wang Xiaoguang (王晓光)

We were saddened to hear of the untimely passing of our colleague, teacher and friend, Wang Xiaoguang, one of the founders of Yunnan Daytop in China. Yunnan Daytop is a leader in China’s efforts to provide voluntary and supportive harm reduction services to people who use drugs, and in that role Wang Xiaoguang has been a consistent advocate for drug users and for Chinese grassroots NGOs that serve them. Asia Catalyst and other international agencies frequently called on Xiaoguang for his insights and advice, and we’ll be at a real loss without him to turn to.

Our (unofficial) translation of Daytop’s obituary for him follows, along with the Chinese original text.

Asia Catalyst

 

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[COMMENTARY] Drug Users and the Legal Framework: The Failure of the War on Drugs in Asia

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Thai AIDS Treatment Action Group protesters – Photo by Rico Gustav

By Karyn Kaplan

Kaplan’s electrifying essay on the human rights of drug users in Asia is excerpted from her plenary speech given at the
International Conference on AIDS in Asia/Pacific (ICAAP), Busan, South Korea, August 27, 2011 and reprinted from the 
Health and Human Rights Forum.

Here in Asia, home to more than half the world’s opiate users,  more than 16 million drug users and at least 6.5 million injectors, where HIV prevalence among injectors is among the highest in the world, where the HIV epidemic is largely driven by unsafe injecting practices, where less than 10% of heroin injectors are on methadone, and where injectors can access an average of just two sterile syringes per month, we lack 90% of the resources necessary to provide the
essential harm reduction services necessary for realizing the right to health. But while resources are a significant challenge, I would argue that even when we have the resources, it does not ensure access.

 

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[COMMENTARY] China’s First Lawsuit on Discrimination Against a Person Living with HIV/AIDS

By Yu Fangqiang

On July 27, 2010, a person living with HIV/AIDS in Anhui Province successfully filed China’s first case alleging employment discrimination on the basis of HIV status. Soon afterwards, a second case was filed in Sichuan Province. A year later, both cases were lost, and both plaintiffs filed appeals. Currently, the third plaintiff in an HIV-related employment discrimination case is preparing to file suit. In this article, lawyer Yu Fangqiang tells the personal story behind the historically important Anhui case.

 

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[NEWS] AIDS Activists Arrested, Shoved at ICAAP

Korean and international AIDS activists who participated in a peaceful protest against the Free Trade Agreement and for access to AIDS treatment at the International Conference on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP) were shoved and dragged by the police while trying to prevent the arrest of AIDS lawyer Jang Seo-yeon. Two activists, including a staff person of the ICAAP Local Organizing Committee, were hospitalized. Below is the joint statement from Korean activists and supporters about the incident.

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