The Phnom Penh Post

Fury at HIV data leak in conservati­ve Singapore

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RICO has lived with HIV for almost a decade, confiding in only a small number of people in socially conservati­ve Singapore, fearful of the reaction. Last month, he got a phone call saying informatio­n about his condition had been published online.

Rico was one of 14,200 people whose HIV status, name and address were dumped on the internet by an American man who is believed to have obtained the confidenti­al data from his partner – a Singaporea­n doctor.

“The LGBT community is angry and frustrated with the entire ordeal,” said Rico, who did not want to be identified by his full name.

The 31-year-old said he was frightened that “the leaked informatio­n may change people’s perception of me”, adding that he had not told all his friends he was HIV-positive.

“Society may be tolerant to the LGBT community but I do not think they are ready to accept a gay and HIVpositiv­e individual. Not in my lifetime,” he said.

While Singapore is modern in many ways, observers say social attitudes have not progressed at the same pace as economic developmen­t and are often highly conservati­ve, as in other parts of Asia.

Those in Singapore with HIV – the virus that causes AIDS – have long complained of prejudice and campaigner­s say the negative reaction to the data breach has highlighte­d the stigma.

A human resources manager working in the hospitalit­y industry was quoted in local paper the Straits Times as saying she would sack any of her staff if their names were among those published.

The virus is usually transmitte­d through sex or sharing of needles and cannot be spread via casual contact, such as shaking hands or hugging.

Foreigners with HIV were for many years not allowed to set foot in Singapore at all. In 2015, authoritie­s lifted the ban on foreigners with the virus making short visits but those seeking to work in Singapore must still pass a test.

Widespread consternat­ion

The lea k, which involved the data of 5,400 Singaporea­ns and 8,800 foreig ner s, ha s c aused w idespread consternat­ion. Sumita Banerjee, executive director of NGO Action for AIDS (AFA), said people with the virus had been calling up her group in tears.

“One of the main concerns is that employers, friends and family who were not aware might react badly,” she said, adding some were afraid of losing their jobs.

But according to guidelines from health authoritie­s, there are generally no valid grounds for terminatin­g the services of an HIV-positive employee simply due to their condition.

Singapore authoritie­s say they have rushed to block access to the informatio­n that was dumped online, allegedly by Mikhy Farrera Brochez, although they have warned he still has it and could release it again.

Since the leak, local media has reported Brochez was arrested in the US for allegedly trespassin­g in his mother’s home, although the case appears unconnecte­d to the data breach.

Speaking to the Straits Times, he protested his innocence and described reports about him as “terribly nasty and inaccurate”.

HIV-positive psychologi­st Brochez first arrived in the city-state in 2008 and used blood samples from his boyfriend, doctor Ler Teck Siang, to pass an HIV test and get a work permit.

He allegedly obtained the data of HIV-positive people from Ler, who had access to the official HIV registry.

In May 2016, police seized documents, a laptop and mobile phones during searches of Brochez’s and Ler’s apartments after receiving informatio­n that the American may be in possession of confidenti­al data.

Brochez was subsequent­ly jailed for lying about his HIV status, using fake degree certificat­es to get work and taking drugs.

He was deported from Singapore last year, but unknown to authoritie­s, he was still in possession of the HIV data, which he later released.

Authoritie­s have not offered any explanatio­n as to why Brochez leaked the data.

The government has come under f ire for t he lea k, t he second major data breach disclosed wit hin t he space of a few months – last year, health records of about 1.5 million Singaporea­ns were stolen in a suspected state-sponsored hack.

In a statement, the health ministry said that the “wellbeing” of those affected by the HIV data leak was their “priority” and support was being offered.

But for Rico, the damage has already been done, and he fears some people with HIV will now refuse to seek treatment due to safety concerns.

“I will not be surprised if the fear drives people undergroun­d.”

 ?? ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP ?? A volunteer pins ribbons bearing the names of people who died of HIV/AIDS during the AIDS Candleligh­t Memorial in Singapore.
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP A volunteer pins ribbons bearing the names of people who died of HIV/AIDS during the AIDS Candleligh­t Memorial in Singapore.

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