UN Welcomes U.S. Removal of HIV Entry Restrictions
New York, Oct 30 2009 8:10PM
The United Nations agency spearheading the world body’s efforts to tackle the HIV/AIDS pandemic today welcomed the decision of the United States to remove 22-year-old entry restrictions based on HIV status.
Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of the
Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (http://www.unaids.org/en/default.asp),
issued a http://www.unaids.org/en/KnowledgeCentre/Resources/PressCentre/PressReleases/2009/20091030_PS_Entry_restrictions_removed_US.asp
statement saying the move by US President Barack Obama
overturns a restriction that was discriminatory and did not
protect public health.
“Today’s announcement
reinforces the position of the US as a global leader in HIV
policy and practice,” Mr. Sidibé said. “This policy
change is a significant step forward by the United States
towards promoting human rights in the AIDS
response.”
The statement noted that the US
Government had already concluded that maintaining HIV status
on a list of excludable entry conditions would not result in
public health benefits and contributed towards the
stigmatization of HIV-infected people.
Mr. Obama
announced the change today as he signed the Ryan White
HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act of 2009, which has provided
treatment and support services to people living with HIV
since 1990.
The legislation is named after Ryan
White, a teenage boy who became a nationally known figure in
the US in the 1980s as he battled discrimination and
ostracism after contracting HIV from a contaminated blood
treatment. He died in 1990.
Mr. Sidibé said UNAIDS
described the Ryan White
programme “as an integral part of the global AIDS
response and a gesture of the United States towards
achieving universal access to HIV prevention, treatment,
care and support for people within the United States living
with
HIV.”
ENDS