2012 Year in Review: A Message from the Executive Director’s Desk

We’re writing to tell you about the exciting work Asia Catalyst is doing with grassroots health groups in Asia, and to ask you to continue your support.

In 2012, Asia Catalyst marked five years of training small grassroots groups led by people directly affected by HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and disabilities. Most of our partners are in China, where authorities restrict community activism, but through their persistence and commitment, here is what we accomplished together this year:
  • Trained the NGO Leadership Cohort, a group of ten health rights groups who get intensive training in nonprofit management and advocacy over the course of one year. This year’s cohort participants included a courageous former teacher living with HIV/AIDS who runs the only group for people with HIV in her hometown, an organization of sex workers doing ground-breaking outreach and organizing in their community, as well as other community leaders from around the country. Three of our cohort participants will become assistant trainers for the 2013 cohort, and will “pay it forward” by training other groups. As the program scales up, it creates a new generation of professional nonprofit leaders.
  • Published three new reports on health and human rights China. Our joint report with Korekata AIDS Law Center on China’s HIV blood disaster was the first major human rights report researched and co-written by a domestic Chinese organization. It was endorsed by UNAIDS and the Shenzhen Center for Disease Control, and our recommendations were taken up by a government advisory working group.
  • Trained dozens of East and Southeast Asian activists in human rights documentation and advocacy. We trained forty activists from Africa, Asia and the US at a workshop in Washington DC, and gave intensive training to a new coalition of 12 leading Chinese and Thai gender and sexuality activists at a workshop in Thailand.
We have already published two volumes of our Know It, Prove It, Change It human rights curriculum in Chinese, English and Thai on our website. In 2014, the third and final volume will be published and available online in English, Thai, Chinese, and Burmese! We’ll then use it to jump-start an exciting new regional human rights training program.
  • Showcased Chinese activists at the International AIDS Conference in Washington, DC. We provided scholarships, training and round-the clock translation as well as hosting workshops, roundtables, and events to ensure that Chinese civil society had a voice at this important meeting.
In 2013 we will transition to new leadership, when our founder, Sara Davis, moves on to a senior position at the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, and Acting Executive Director Andrea Worden takes the helm.
Please make a tax-deductible contribution today at https://www.asiacatalyst.org/get_involved/, or mail a check to Asia Catalyst, 39 West 32nd St, Suite 1602, New York, NY 10001.
Thank you for your support!
Sincerely,
Sara L.M. Davis, Ph.D.                                    Andrea Worden
Founder                                               Acting Executive Director

 


[COMMENTARY] In China, HIV & HCV Transmission through Blood Continues

This blog is a cross posting from Seeing Red in China.  It was written by Dr. Wang Shuping on the occasion of World Aids Day.  It has been translated from the original Chinese by Cao Yaxue.  Asia Catalyst’s China Program Officer, Mike Frick recently wrote about Dr. Wang’s experience on our blog; read that piece here.

I am Wang Shuping, and, as a doctor and epidemics researcher, I was the one who first discovered Hepatitis C virus and HIV contamination in plasma collection stations mushroomed in China in the 1990s. Hundreds of thousands of innocent people became infected as a result. Twenty years have passed since those frightful discoveries, the current state of blood safety in China, to my dismay, still presents an alarming picture of continuing transmission of HIV and HCV through blood. On World AIDS Day today, I would like to call attention to the matter to raise the public’s awareness and warn the policy makers.

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[UPDATE] Cross Post From China Law and Policy: LGBT Rights in China

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The following piece is cross-posted from China Law & Policy about the November 7, 2012 event “China’s Comrades: New Developments in LGBT Rights” that Asia Catalyst co-sponsored with The Leitner Center for International Law and Justice at Fordham Law School.  China Law & Policy believes that an understanding of the development of the Chinese legal system is integral to an informed U.S. policy toward China.
By Elizabeth M. Lynch

Last week, the day after the United States elected its first openly gay Senator and more states extended the right to marry to gay couples, Asia Catalyst and Fordham Law School’s Leitner Center co-hosted a fascinating talk about Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) rights in China entitled “China’s Comrades.”

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[UPDATE] July 2012 – September 2012

We had a busy summer quarter – here’s a quick report-back on our coaching, training, and advocacy, as well as some exciting growth at the home front.

Celebrating our Fifth AnniversaryBoard Matching Still Available

5th-anniversary.gifThis
year, Asia Catalyst celebrates five years of helping to build grassroots groups
in East and Southeast Asia. As part of our “New Generation of Leaders” 5th
Anniversary Campaign
, our board of directors has generously promised to match your donations dollar for dollar.  That means a donation of $100 doubles to $200, and $500 will double to $1000! Please make a tax-deductible gift here.

Your gift of $100 or more gets you a lovely gift book — with photos and background on our inspiring partners in China and Southeast Asia.

TRAINING FOR GRASSROOTS GROUPS

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The NGO Leadership Cohort– Participants in our year-long capacity building program for Chinese health rights groups met in September in Chiang Mai, Thailand for a weekend workshop on advocacy. Over three days, cohort members learned how to plan and conduct advocacy campaigns while applying these new concepts and skills to revise the advocacy plans they drafted individually or in teams over the summer.  Andrew Hunter, director of the Asia-Pacific Network of Sex Workers, joined the workshop as an guest trainer.

 

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[NEWS] UN Report Says in Asia, Criminalizing Sex Work Fuels HIV/AIDS

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By Brian Bonci

A new report from three UN agencies, “Sex Work and the Law,” finds no evidence from countries of Asia and the Pacific that criminalization of sex work has prevented HIV epidemics among sex workers and their clients.”  The new report, from the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and UNAIDS examines 48 countries in Asia and the Pacific to assess laws, legal policies and law enforcement practices that affect the human rights of sex workers and impact on the effectiveness of HIV responses.

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