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Open civil society letter to the participants of the “Capacity building workshop on human rights and gender in HIV legal frameworks”

15 April 2008  
 
Dear Honourable Participants:  
 
We, the undersigned organizations and individuals, write to extend our best wishes for the upcoming “Capacity building workshop on human rights and gender in HIV legal frameworks” to be held in Dakar, Senegal from 16-18 April 2008.

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HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
Thematic Page

Women and HIV/AIDS
Thematic Page, May 31, 2005

In light of the importance of a robust legislative response to the epidemic and strong action on behalf of the most affected communities, we draw your attention to serious human rights concerns that have been raised with respect to the N’Djamena “model law” and the national HIV laws that have followed it. This meeting is a vital opportunity to update these laws so that the region of West and Central Africa reflects the very best guidance on how countries respond to HIV with legislation.  
 
A number of provisions of the N’Djamena “model law” violate international human rights law and the UNAIDS/Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights International Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights (“the International Guidelines”). Further, while the International Guidelines emphasize the importance of protecting women’s rights, the model law  
is extremely detrimental for women, who are more likely than men to be tested for HIV (due to testing conducted in antenatal clinics) and more vulnerable to violence and abandonment resulting from disclosure of their status.  
 
Specifically:  
• The “model law” contains language that could severely restrict educational activities around HIV prevention in schools.  
• In explicit contravention of the International Guidelines, the “model law” allows mandatory HIV testing in situations such as where pregnant women go for a medical check-up, or “to solve a matrimonial conflict”. Mandatory testing for pregnant women jeopardizes women’s health and lives by discouraging them from seeking pregnancy related care.  
• The “model law” imposes a blanket duty on health care practitioners to disclose the HIV status of their patients to their patients’ spouses or sexual partners, regardless of the actual risk of transmission. The law contains no provisions to ensure that the person living with HIV be given advance warning of such notification, nor any means to prevent violence or abandonment that may be a direct result of such involuntary disclosure. This provision has particular implications for women who bear the brunt of intimate partner violence.  
• The “model law” contains a provision criminalizing “the willful transmission of HIV”, and defines HIV transmission to be transmission of the virus “by any means”. This broad language could impose criminal penalties even on individuals who practice safer sex and/or disclose their HIV status to their sexual partners, or on mothers who transmit HIV to their children, either in utero or during labour and delivery.  
 
UNAIDS and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights reissued the International Guidelines in 2006 in recognition of the continued centrality of human rights to the fight against AIDS. We urge you to ensure that the HIV laws in West and Central Africa guarantee human  
rights protections, including the human rights of women. HIV laws in the region should be based on education, empowerment, non-discrimination, and community engagement. Punitive provisions and other approaches that exacerbate stigma and discrimination will only drive people away from testing and treatment services and risk undermining an effective response to the epidemic.  
 
We therefore urge you to ensure that the workshop results in:  
 
1) Concrete plans, within established time periods, to amend the limited number of articles in national HIV laws that are at variance with international human rights law and the UNAIDS/Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights’ International Guidelines.  
2) The N’Djamena “model law” has been promoted as a template for legislation in the region. It is therefore critical that it be revised so that it provides parliamentarians with a resource that reflects international human rights principles and the UNAIDS/Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights’ International Guidelines. We understand that revision was agreed to during the previous meeting on the “model legislation” in Dakar, July 2007. Specifically, the law should be revised to include provisions that specifically protect the rights of women, prisoners, and other vulnerable populations as well as to amend existing provisions on:  
     
    o Education on HIV and AIDS in schools;  
    o Mandatory HIV testing;  
    o Partner notification;  
    o Discrimination;  
    o Criminalisation of transmission;  
    o Prisons.  
 
3) A clear commitment to genuine participation with civil society partners, particularly with representatives of those communities who will be most affected by the laws under discussion including persons living with HIV and women, from the region and across Africa, throughout the drafting, amendment, and implementation of these laws. We look forward to learning the outcome of this week’s meeting and to following this important process.  
 
Sincerely,  
 
AIDS and Human Rights Research Unit  
University of Pretoria, South Africa  
 
AIDS Law Project  
South Africa  
 
AIDS and Rights Alliance of Southern Africa  
Southern Africa  
 
Yaovi Mawulé Apedo  
JMAH (Jeunes missionnaires d'Aide Humanitaire)  
TOGO  
 
Janet Asiimwe  
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights  
Zimababwe  
 
Association AFRIQUE JEUNES 2020  
Mali  
 
The ATHENA Network  
Global  
 
Gueye Babacar  
Advocacy Program Manager, Association AWA  
Senegal  
 
Alvaro Bermejo  
Executive Director, International HIV/AIDS Alliance  
 
Elizabeth Brundige  
Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, Yale Law School  
United States  
 
Robert Carr  
Executive Director, Caribbean Vulnerable  
Communities Coalition  
Jamaica  
 
Center for Reproductive Rights  
United States  
 
Linda Dumba Chicalu  
Project Lawyer, Aids Law Unit, Legal Assistance Centre  
Namibia  
 
Faustace Chirwa  
Executive Director, National Women's Lobby &  
Rights Group (NWLRG)  
Malawi  
 
The Coalition of Women Living with HIV and AIDS in Malawi  
 
Lironga Eparu  
National Association of PLWHA  
Namibia  
 
Marieta de Vos  
Executive Director  
Mosaic Training, Service & Healing Centre for Women  
South Africa  
 
Simão Cacumba M. Faria  
SCARJOV- Associação de Reintegração dosJovens/Crianças na Vida Social  
Angola  
 
Patricia Figueroa  
Caribbean Regional Coordinator HIV Collaborative Fund/ ITPC  
Puerto Rico Community Clinical Research on AIDS - PR CoNCRA  
 
Sally Fisher  
Intersect Worldwide  
United States  
 
Aneleh Fourie-Le Roux  
Training and Mentoring Coordinator, Christian  
Aids Bureau for Southern Africa  
South Africa  
 
Anne Gathumbi  
Program Officer, OSIEA  
Kenya  
 
Ted Gaudet  
Board Member, GNP+NA  
Canada  
 
Liesl Gerntholtz  
Director, Tshwaranang Legal Advocacy Centre  
South Africa  
 
Global AIDS Alliance  
Global  
 
GNP+ (The Global Network of People living with HIV/AIDS)  
Global  
 
Gill Greer  
Director General, IPPF  
Global  
 
Rosemary Hack  
AIDSLink  
South Africa  
 
Yapja Youchaou Hamed  
National Coordinator, NGO Solidarity Cameroon  
Cameroun  
 
Human Rights Watch  
United States  
 
International Community of Women Living with  
HIV/AIDS (ICW)  
Global  
 
International Women’s Health Coalition  
United States  
 
Ipas (International NGO - offices in 13 countries)  
 
Hannah Jansen  
Stichting Marieke Bevelanderhuis  
Netherlands  
 
Léonnie Kandolo  
Présidente, Protection Enfants Sida “P.E.S.”  
République Démocratique du Congo  
 
Georges Kanuma  
ANSS (Association National de Soutien aux  
Séropositifs et aux malades du sida)  
Burundi  
 
Johanna Kehler  
Executive Director, AIDS Legal Network  
South Africa  
 
Bhawani Shanker Kusum  
Secretary & Executive Director, Gram Bharati Samiti (GBS)  
India  
 
Rafa Valente Machava  
Executive Director, Women, Law and  
Development Association MULEIDE  
Mozambique  
 
Stephen McGill  
Stop AIDS In Liberia (SAIL)  
Liberia  
 
Frank Molteno  
Coordinator, Cathedral HIV & AIDS Task Team  
(CHATT) [Anglican Church of Southern Africa]  
South Africa  
 
Damaris Mounlom  
Coordinator, Women-Health-Development NGO  
Cameroon  
 
Buyiswa Mpini  
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University  
South Africa  
 
Dr. Lydia Mungherera  
Chair of the Executive Board of Mama's Club  
Uganda  
 
Malala Mwondela  
Executive Director  
Zambia AIDSLaw Research & Advocacy Network (ZARAN)  
Zambia  
 
Sylvie Niombo  
AZUR Développement  
Congo  
 
Patrice Desire Ndzie  
KidAIDS-Cameroon  
Cameroon  
 
Pan African Treatment Access Movement (PATAM)  
Morocco  
 
Positive Malaysian Treatment Access & Advocacy Group (MTAAG+)  
Malaysia  
 
Nicolas Ritter  
Director, Prévention Information et Lutte contre le Sida – PILS –  
Mauritius  
 
Solidarity and Action Against HIV Infection in India (SAATHII)  
India  
 
Adejoke Sonoiki  
Journalists Against AIDS (JAAIDS)  
Nigeria  
 
SIDACTION  
France  
 
James Silk  
Clinical Professor of Law, Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, Yale Law School  
United States  
 
Meena Saraswathi Seshu  
General Secretary, SANGRAM  
India  
 
Richard Shilamba  
Ag. National Coordinator, Southern Africa Human Rights NGO Network(SAHRiNGON)-Tanzania Chapter  
Tanzania  
 
Bille Sike  
Association De Lutte Contre Les Violences Faites  
Aux Femmes  
Cameroun  
 
Marion Stevens  
Treatment Monitor, Health Systems Trust  
South Africa  
 
Belinda Tima  
ICW Co-Chair  
United Kingdom  
 
Norman Tjombe  
Director, Legal Assistance Centre  
Namibia  
 
Zoumana Isaac Traore  
National Coordinator, International AIDS Candlelight Memorial  
Mali  
 
Treatment Action Campaign  
South Africa  
 
Lyn van Rooyen  
Programme Manager, CARIS - Christian AIDS Resource and Information Service  
South Africa  
 
Frans Viljoen  
Director, Centre for Human Rights, University of  
Pretoria  
South Africa  
 
World YWCA  
Global
 

 
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