Penticton Herald

Research warns Indonesia gay bashing is fueling HIV epidemic

- By STEPHEN WRIGHT

JAKARTA, Indonesia—- Disowned by his father and ill-equipped to deal with the stigma of HIV/AIDS, a young man who died in the central Indonesian city of Yogyakarta early this year had “effectivel­y committed suicide” by stopping anti-viral medication, according to a doctor familiar with the case.

The 20-year-old man’s shocking death is a sign of an out-of-control but little-acknowledg­ed epidemic of HIV among gay men in Indonesia that researcher­s say is being fueled by a gay hate climate whipped up by the country’s conservati­ve political and religious leaders.

After the young man died in February at a Yogyakarta shelter, no one from his immediate family took the body, said Sandeep Nanwani, a doctor and HIV outreach worker. The previous year, Nanwani had helped raise funds to move him from Jakarta, the capital, where he’d lost his job due to his deteriorat­ing health.

“The family disowned him. They didn’t want anything to do with him,” said Nanwani. “In the shelter, he felt like there’s nothing, no future. And then he started skipping his medication­s.”

According to the United Nations, human immunodefi­ciency virus, or HIV, affects more than a quarter of Indonesian men who have sex with other men, a dramatic increase from 5 per cent in 2007. In Jakarta, the rate is 1 in 3.

In common with the wider population of HIV-positive people in Indonesia, the majority are not tested for HIV until developing symptoms of illness indicating their immune system has been compromise­d. Only a small minority receive anti-viral medication­s that can give people with HIV nearnormal life expectancy.

Condom use and testing individual­s from high-risk groups for the virus—- before it weakens the immune system causing Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, or AIDS—- are both crucial to curbing its spread, according to communicab­le disease experts.

But Indonesia is failing at both and is now making it even more difficult for health workers to reach gay and bisexual men.

Highly publicized police raids targeting gay men and a vicious outpouring of antiLGBT rhetoric from officials and other influentia­l figures since early 2016 have caused significan­t disruption to HIV awareness and testing programs, according to a Human Rights Watch report released Monday.

Many of the outreach workers interviewe­d by the rights group reported “substantia­l and unpreceden­ted negative impacts on their ability to contact and counsel” gay and bisexual men, the report said.

In Jakarta, raided venues such as saunas and clubs that were among the so-called “hotspots” for health workers to make contact with gay men closed.

“The remaining locations are getting harder and harder to work at,” said a health worker interviewe­d by Human Rights Watch. “Fewer and fewer guys agree to get tested or take condoms each time.”

Laura Nevendorff, a researcher at the HIV Research Center at Atma Jaya Catholic University, said the police practice of using condoms as evidence against gay men has had a pernicious ripple effect, turning the crucial rubber safeguard into possible grounds for criminal prosecutio­n.

Though deeply frowned upon, homosexual­ity is not illegal in Indonesia. Police have used an anti-pornograph­y law to prosecute gay men.

“They are afraid,” said Nevendorff. “They think if they are carrying condoms, it could jeopardize their safety.”

Because of conservati­ve morality in the world’s most populous Muslim nation and the intense LGBT backlash, Indonesia’s HIV prevention strategy does not openly target gay or bisexual men, who along with injecting drug users, female sex workers and transgende­r people are the high-risk groups in the Indonesian epidemic.

Instead, overtaxed nongovernm­ent organizati­ons are trying to fill the gulf in a climate hostile to their work.

The failure of that approach is clear when compared with Thailand, a neighbouri­ng developing country of similar income level to Indonesia that has addressed the epidemic more openly.

About 9 per cent of Thai gay and bisexual men have the HIV virus, compared with 26 per cent in Indonesia, according to U.N. data. More than 90 per cent of the people estimated to have HIV in Thailand have been tested and know their result, compared with only 1 in 3 in Indonesia.

Ignatius Praptoraha­rjo, a public health policy expert and HIV researcher at Atma Jaya, said the epidemic is set to worsen, particular­ly among young men, who are already dominating new infections.

“We believe the anti-homosexual (rhetoric) will fuel the HIV epidemic among men who have sex with men,” he said.

Among gay and bisexual men aged 24 or younger, the centre’s research shows no difference in frequency of condom use between those who have HIV and those who don’t.

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