The Borneo Post

Philippine ministry rejects school condoms

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MANILA: The Phi l ippine education ministry has rejected a plan to distribute condoms in schools, authoritie­s said yesterday, blocking a move meant to stop one of Asia’s fastest growing HIV epidemics.

The health department said in December it would give out contracept­ives in schools as part of a strategy to prevent HIV infections, prompting criticism from some lawmakers and bishops in the mainly Catholic nation.

The Philippine­s has a rapidly growing HIV epidemic, with rights groups saying the government has failed to promote contracept­ives and give sex education to gay or bisexual men.

However the education department said this week it would not allow condom distributi­on in primary and high schools because laws only mandated the agency to provide “sexuality education”.

“We want to be sensitive to what the parents feel and we got the feedback that they don’t agree with the idea,” education assistant secretary Tonisito Umali told AFP.

“Parents think this will send a wrong signal to our students that it’s OK to have premarital sex, to have sex while you’re a minor so long as you are protected.”

Access to contracept­ives is a contentiou­s issue in the Philippine­s, with the influentia­l Catholic Church opposing laws and programmes seeking to distribute condoms to the poor.

President Rodrigo Duterte has challenged the Church, ordering government agencies last month to deliver free contracept­ives to six million women to boost a family planning programme.

His health department has also launched a plan to curb the spread of HIV especially among Filipinos aged 15 to 24, which it said was the most vulnerable to infection.

Health department spokesman Eric Tayag said his agency would continue distributi­ng condoms in clinics and outreach missions despite the decision of the education ministry. — AFP

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