The Star Malaysia

Right to health

This World AIDS Day, let’s make the protection of an individual’s fundamenta­l right to health our shared responsibi­lity.

- By BAKHTIAR TALHAH Bakhtiar Talhah is President of the Malaysian AIDS Council.

“TO uproot the AIDS epidemic, it will be necessary to deal with its root societal causes – namely a lack of respect for human rights.”

Those cautionary words of Dr Jonathan Mann – pioneer of the global AIDS movement at the height of the epidemic in the 1980s – could not ring any truer today as we observe this year’s World AIDS Day aptly themed Right to Health.

Regarding the spreadp of HIV as a social injustice, Dr Mann n establishe­d the intersecti­on of health and human rights. The way the world viewed thet AIDS epidemic was forever changed, or a at the very least, challenged.

The many succe sses of the AIDS response that we t ake for granted today was the result – direct or otherwi ise – of Dr Mann’s ground- breaking work.

Without Dr Man nn’s authoritat­ive voice e and fierce advocac cy, especially during his time as Directo or of the World Healt th Organizati­on’s Global Programme e on AIDS which he founded, we could d not possibly dream of a world where the g lobal scale-up of antiretr roviral therapy has contrib buted to a 48% decline in dea aths from AIDS-related causeses and enabled the more than 20 million people with

HIV around the world to lead full lives.

At home, we share some of the progress made in the global AIDS response. New HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths continues to stabilise. Cases of mother-to-child transmissi­on have fallen to a 20-year low.

And thanks to the expansion of harm reduction – a risk reduction strategy built on the respect for the rights of people who use drugs – new HIV infections via the drug injecting route have declined by over 60% since the programme was introduced in 2006.

However, there were instances this past year where, in the words of Dr Mann, “[the] lack of respect for human rights” threatened to undo the advances in the national AIDS response and the growing visibility and understand­ing of sexual minorities impacted by HIVHIV/ AIDS, namely men who have sex with men and transgende­r women.

With the rise of sexually transmitte­d HIV (which accounted for 84% of new infections last year), certain quarters were quick to point the finger of blame to these sexual minorities and the LGBT community.

In response, we warned about the harms of hate and fear mongering and spoke against allowing homophobia and transphobi­a from pervading the HIV/AIDS discourse.

Transgende­r women – a key population whose HIV prevalence is 14 times higher than the general population – continue to suffer systemic harassment, abuse and persecutio­n for expressing their gender identity.

Not only are these acts contrarian to human rights, they unjustly deny their access and right to health.

The ominous “lack of respect for human rights” has no place in the AIDS response, particular­ly now that we, together with the Ministry of Health Malaysia, have embarked on a mission to end AIDS by 2030.

To this end, we have introduced new communtity-based health innovation­s to tackle the escalating sexual health crisis.

The case management approach for men who have sex with men, the pilot project of which has proven successful, is now being expanded for scale and reach to cover other key population­s such as people who use drugs and sex workers with lifesaving HIV prevention, treatment and support.

Community-based testing, an approach to complement the Government-provided anonymous HIV testing and counseling at health clinics, empowers key population­s to undergo HIV testing with the help of their peers without fear, stigma or prejudice.

Our commitment to the protection of rights of people living with HIV at the workplace pushed our advocacy and that of our sister organisati­on, the Malaysian AIDS Foundation, for the legislatio­n of an anti-discrimina­tion act.

Our efforts paid off when the Minister of Human Resources himself announced his Ministry’s support for this propositio­n.

The right to health also underpinne­d our work in advancing discussion­s with the Ministry of Education via its Deputy Minister on the integratio­n of HIV/AIDS education into secondary school syllabus.

In our bid to further improve the understand­ing of HIV/AIDS issues through the religious lens, we worked with the Department of Islamic Developmen­t Malaysia on the Resolution of the Islam & HIV Roundtable Meeting, built on the principles of public health and values of compassion, acceptance and respect for the right to health.

We have more than enough evidence to show that a rights-based approach to the AIDS response is a right one, and we will continue to work within a human rights framework in meeting the targets and addressing the challenges of the ending AIDS phase.

Dr Mann passed away almost 20 years ago.

Today, let’s honour his legacy by making the protection of the individual’s fundamenta­l right to health our shared responsibi­lity.

 ?? — AFP ?? Flowers sit on the Circle of Friends during the World AIDS Day commemorat­ion event at the National AIDS Memorial Grove on December 1 in San Francisco, the United States.
— AFP Flowers sit on the Circle of Friends during the World AIDS Day commemorat­ion event at the National AIDS Memorial Grove on December 1 in San Francisco, the United States.
 ?? — Reuters ?? Health workers and volunteers form a human ribbon to commemorat­e World AIDS day in San Salvador, El Salvador, December 1.
— Reuters Health workers and volunteers form a human ribbon to commemorat­e World AIDS day in San Salvador, El Salvador, December 1.
 ??  ?? Thanks to the expansion of harm reduction – a risk reduction strategy built on the respect for the rights of people who use drugs – new HIV infections via the drug injecting route have declined by over 60% since the programme was introduced in 2006. —...
Thanks to the expansion of harm reduction – a risk reduction strategy built on the respect for the rights of people who use drugs – new HIV infections via the drug injecting route have declined by over 60% since the programme was introduced in 2006. —...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia