Scientists and other delegates meeting at IAS
2007 in Sydney should focus their attention on how human rights abuses against
people living with HIV undermine the impact of scientific advances against
AIDS, says Human Rights Watch .
"Research is central to the fight against HIV/AIDS," said Joe Amon,
director of Human Rights Watch's HIV/AIDS Program and a molecular biologist by
training. "But scientific advances will have little impact if people
living with HIV continue to be stigmatized and abused."
Human Rights Watch cited examples from the
Asia-Pacific region, where the conference is being held, of children and
adolescents living with or at risk of HIV infection being discriminated
against, sexually abused and socially marginalized, including instances where hospitals
have refused medical procedures for children and pregnant women living with
HIV.
Human Rights Watch also called on scientists attending the conference to
protest government harassment and intimidation of AIDS activists, as is
currently happening in Burma, China and Zambia: "While scientists are able to travel freely to Sydney to discuss the
international response to AIDS, activists around the world are jailed and
harassed for their work against HIV," said Amon.
Conference delegates should acknowledge that technological advances such as vaccines or
vaginal microbicides will have little impact unless they are accompanied by a
greater respect for women's rights. "We can not end the AIDS epidemic solely through science," said
Amon. "Scientific advances and human rights advances must go hand in
hand."
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