Dutch Thai experiences with buidling a happy/gay theater cafe/bar in Thailand's Patong Beach on Phuket. An adventure in which we will try to create a home a way from home, where foreigners ("farang" in Thai) and Thai alike, will feel at home and enjoy making decent fun together. The Backstage, small as it is, will organise or facilitate all kinds of entertainment, life music, lipsync shows, karaoke, cabaret, stand-up-comedy, whatever cusotmers or we come up with ;-)
Thursday, 31 March 2011
The return of the Max! ;-)
He stayed with us the last 2/3 months of 2010 before he felt he had to go back to Koi Samui all of a sudden at the beginning of the new year. We ourselfs and customers were surprised by this sudden move, but then again... this is Thailand, Amazing Thailand.... and to hold that thought:
Guess who came to The Backstage today with his stuff: Max!
He allready announced early last week that he wanted to come work for us again and after we expressed no objections, he surprised us by actually arriving back today, in the middle of the rain.
So Backstage is now back on, as we like to call it, full staff mode............ little bit ironic with the unexpected (?) early start of the low season, but then again, who speaks of low and high seasons these days?
Backstage likes to be their for all our (potential) customers full year round with little regard for high or low season because Backstage is were one can relax when one gets off his or her stage, and that's not bound to any season!;-)
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
Introducing: New arrivals at Backstage ;-)
Since today our staf has grown with two guys, we can hardly call them boys ofcourse, who started work today at The Backstage.
They start with looking how things go ... seeing and observing first how we work here at Backstage before actually jumping in themselfs.
Before they came to us, these young men worked at Boys & Boys, opposite My Way in paradise Soi..... That bar suddenly closed down earlier this month and we were happy to welcome them in our modest little venue.
We honestly hope that soon enough they will feel very much at home in their new home away from home, and become true members of our little backstage family ;-)
Left: Dael, also called Bil(ly), he's 27 years old and hopes to celebrate his 28th birthday on the 1st of May
Right: Bo, he's 28 years old and celebrates his birthday on the 10th of June!
We hope that they will help to make our customers feel at home, and that all of you who in time visit us, will feel happy to be served by either one of them and will feel able to close them in your hearts as part of The Backstage bunch ;-)
They start with looking how things go ... seeing and observing first how we work here at Backstage before actually jumping in themselfs.
Before they came to us, these young men worked at Boys & Boys, opposite My Way in paradise Soi..... That bar suddenly closed down earlier this month and we were happy to welcome them in our modest little venue.
We honestly hope that soon enough they will feel very much at home in their new home away from home, and become true members of our little backstage family ;-)
Left: Dael, also called Bil(ly), he's 27 years old and hopes to celebrate his 28th birthday on the 1st of May
Right: Bo, he's 28 years old and celebrates his birthday on the 10th of June!
We hope that they will help to make our customers feel at home, and that all of you who in time visit us, will feel happy to be served by either one of them and will feel able to close them in your hearts as part of The Backstage bunch ;-)
Saturday, 19 March 2011
New promotion at Backstage, valid till the 10th of April !
The Backstage has a new offer running till the 10th of April, just before the start of Songkran;-)
Backstage is giving all customers who hand in the orange flyer with the promotion :
a 25% discount on all their drinks on that particular visit between 5 and 9 pm!
Left: Ready to receive our customers for food, drinks, coffee/tea or whatever they like to enjoy, including karaoke ;-)
Specially for our Thai customers we also have a promotion more suited for them:
same same but different, as they say here:
20% discount on bottles when using Backstage's karaoke facility from midnight till closing time ;-)
OFCOURSE, ALL OF YOU WHO BRING A PRINTOUT OF THIS WEBLOG ENTRY TO THE BAR RECEIVES THE SAME PROMOTION AS WHEN HANDING IN THE ORANGE FLYER!
Wud's birthday Party on 15th of March, a modest but most relaxing and fun celebration!
When we started up The Backstage last August/September we had a Thai guy running that small restaurant opposite Backstage & Superboys, we nowadays use for food at our bar.
Some bad luck happened to him and he had to sell his small restaurant and left Patong Phuket to return to his home province in the north east of Thailand.
Before he started that small restaurant he worked at Big Boom Boy and some of the old customers of J&B Bar may remember some of our outings to our present soi when we enjoyed ourselfs at Superboys and Big Boom Boy. By the way, Big Boom Boy in the form we knew and enjoyed, doesn't exsist anymore... this last month it as been converted into a laundry service... but with leaving all the signs etc. of Big Boom Boy on the outsite in tact .... so typicaly Thai;-)
Now this guy, Wud is his name, if you hadn't guessed that allready, enjoyed using Backstage for drinks & karaoke with his friends on a very regular basis. Now Wud came back for a couple of weeks to Patong Phuket and decided that he would like to celebrate his birthday at The Backstage.
Ofcourse we enjoyed organising his birthday party for him! We also had not forgotten how he helped us get known and started in our first months here in our soi (=street) as well.
So the Backstage went in party-mode and we decorated the place according the occasion: a simple birthday party ;-) (picture below)
Now, the flowerladies seem allways able to smell where an occasion takes place which might be in need of celebration flowers, so they turn up and try to sell them.
In a way not bed, because they often smell most wonderfull and attractive...and when you buy the flowers for hanging around your neck then those smells accompany you the whole remainder of that evening/night ;-)
By the way its a popular flower gift to give to persons on the even of their departure, or, as in our situation, for someones birthday.... and as you can see on the pic below, Wud got his! Next to Wud, one of Wud's farang friends, Egebert, also known among Thai as Peter...Thai seem to have a hard time with saying Egbert and made it into Peter ;-)
Picture above: When the clock has hit midnight, its the custom around here to bring out the birthday cake, when their is one of course ;-)
Ofcourse we at Backstage arranged for one, and Wud was very happy to receive his cake with a symbolic number of candles on top of it, from me and blew them out in one go...this time our candles were normal and so easy to blow them out .... by the way, it made them much more harder to keep burning while bringing the cake out to Wud haha.
But whats a Thai birthday party without karaoke?
Wud managed to get all of the farang guests, us westerners, to sing songs, or at least give it a serious try...and this turned our birthday party in one fun affair of singing, laughing...simple real enjoyment and celebration.
Picture below: Some of our farang joining Wud singing and look to thow truly they enjoy!
Some bad luck happened to him and he had to sell his small restaurant and left Patong Phuket to return to his home province in the north east of Thailand.
Before he started that small restaurant he worked at Big Boom Boy and some of the old customers of J&B Bar may remember some of our outings to our present soi when we enjoyed ourselfs at Superboys and Big Boom Boy. By the way, Big Boom Boy in the form we knew and enjoyed, doesn't exsist anymore... this last month it as been converted into a laundry service... but with leaving all the signs etc. of Big Boom Boy on the outsite in tact .... so typicaly Thai;-)
Now this guy, Wud is his name, if you hadn't guessed that allready, enjoyed using Backstage for drinks & karaoke with his friends on a very regular basis. Now Wud came back for a couple of weeks to Patong Phuket and decided that he would like to celebrate his birthday at The Backstage.
Ofcourse we enjoyed organising his birthday party for him! We also had not forgotten how he helped us get known and started in our first months here in our soi (=street) as well.
So the Backstage went in party-mode and we decorated the place according the occasion: a simple birthday party ;-) (picture below)
Now, the flowerladies seem allways able to smell where an occasion takes place which might be in need of celebration flowers, so they turn up and try to sell them.
In a way not bed, because they often smell most wonderfull and attractive...and when you buy the flowers for hanging around your neck then those smells accompany you the whole remainder of that evening/night ;-)
By the way its a popular flower gift to give to persons on the even of their departure, or, as in our situation, for someones birthday.... and as you can see on the pic below, Wud got his! Next to Wud, one of Wud's farang friends, Egebert, also known among Thai as Peter...Thai seem to have a hard time with saying Egbert and made it into Peter ;-)
Picture above: When the clock has hit midnight, its the custom around here to bring out the birthday cake, when their is one of course ;-)
Ofcourse we at Backstage arranged for one, and Wud was very happy to receive his cake with a symbolic number of candles on top of it, from me and blew them out in one go...this time our candles were normal and so easy to blow them out .... by the way, it made them much more harder to keep burning while bringing the cake out to Wud haha.
But whats a Thai birthday party without karaoke?
Wud managed to get all of the farang guests, us westerners, to sing songs, or at least give it a serious try...and this turned our birthday party in one fun affair of singing, laughing...simple real enjoyment and celebration.
Picture below: Some of our farang joining Wud singing and look to thow truly they enjoy!
Friday, 4 March 2011
Global Commission: HIV programs can only be truly effective if sexual minorities are decriminalised
by Laurindo Garci, Fridae’s HIV Programs Manager and Manila-based correspondent.
Over 200 participants from 22 Asia-Pacific countries gathered in Bangkok for a historic dialogue hosted by the Global Commission on HIV and the Law. As of now, 90 percent of countries in the Asia-Pacific region still have laws and practices that obstruct the rights of people living with HIV and those at higher risk of HIV exposure.
Delegates watching a video message from UNDP Administrator,
Helen Clark in the main conference room at the UN
Conference Centre, Bangkok. Watch Helen Clark's video message.
All photos courtesy of UNDP Regional Centre, Bangkok.Members of the Asia-Pacific LGBT community, public health workers and civil society came face-to-face with lawmakers, judiciary and police during a rare opportunity to air their grievances and share stories in hopes that a frank discussion on the core issues around HIV might change hearts and ultimately change laws.
The first of six regional dialogues for the Global Commission on HIV and the Law was held in Bangkok on February 16 and 17. The event comes almost midway through the 18-month lifespan of an independent commission, convened with the support of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), and tasked to analyse the critical legal and human rights challenges of the HIV epidemic and recommend remedial policies.
Work started for the Commission in June 2010 and its 14 Commissioners – which include former presidents and members of international judiciary in its line-up – are working towards the goal of delivering key findings and recommendations by December 2011.
Panel discussion during the Asia-Pacific Regional Dialogue
Press Conference (left to right) UNAIDS Executive Director,
Michel Sidibé is the Executive Director of UNAIDS; HIV & the Law
Commissioners Hon. Michael Kirby and Jon Ungphakorn.
:
Observers believe that the credentials and political clout of this independent commission – which count Former President of Brazil, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Parliamentarian Dame Carol Kidu from Papua New Guinea, the Honourable Michael Kirby, former Supreme Court Judge from Australia and Jon Ungphakorn from the Thai Senate among its members – could help convince governments and judiciaries that laws and law enforcement should support, rather than block, effective HIV responses.
During the dialogue, the Commissioners assigned to this first session and their legal counterparts from the region, heard that the burden of HIV is rests on the shoulders of Asian and Pacific Islander gay or bisexual men and other MSM. If current trends prevail, 50-percent of new HIV infections will be among by MSM by 2020, according to a Commission on AIDS in Asia report released in 2008. It is for this reason that various community groups who presented for the Commission advocated so stridently for the decriminalisation of same-sex behaviour.
This localised understanding is timely as scientific evidence released at the 2010 International AIDS Conference supports models of targeted prevention and treatment services for those most-as-risk of HIV infection. The research found that focusing on key-affected populations can result in a decline in on overall HIV prevalence in the general population. Hence governments and public health workers are being urged to “know their epidemic” and provide care and support for those who need it the most.
A preparation session for MSM civil society delegates (left to right)
Hisham Hussein and Raymond Tai from PT Foundation Malaysia;
community representative from Vietnam; Aung Thein, Burnett Institute,
Myanmar; representative from Sangama, India; Edmund Settle,
UNDP Regional Centre Bangkok;
Paul Causey, APCOM; Stuart Koe, Fridae & APCOM.
Dr Stuart Koe, CEO of Fridae and Vice-Chair of the Asia Pacific Coalition on Male Sexual Health (APCOM) attempted to spell out the conflict that is suffered by men who have sex with men and transgender people in the face of HIV.
“Discriminatory actions by public authorities threaten recent progress in addressing the HIV epidemic among these particularly vulnerable populations,” Dr Koe said. "During the past year, police and public security authorities across the Asia Pacific region have increasingly targeted men who sex with men and transgender people with physical and sexual assault, harassment, extortion and sometimes forced blood testing.”
Dr Koe and other community spokespeople from around the region recounted stories of human rights abuses against gay or bisexual men and other men who have sex with men with clear repercussions on HIV risk and access to treatment. Reports from China and the Philippines reveal how police often use charges of sex work as means to harass MSM and transgender people. Charges are often dropped in exchange for extorted money or sexual favours. There are several cases where on-duty HIV outreach workers have been snared by police in South Asia on suspicion of sex work. Possession of condoms was used as evidence of the charges.
Many laws in the region are preventing the distribution of MSM-specific safer sex education information on the basis that these materials contravene strict pornography laws, for example in Sri Lanka and Indonesia. Or similarly in Malaysia and Singapore where censorship codes prohibiting the promotion of homosexuality in the public domain hinder the scaling-up of MSM-specific HIV and sexual health outreach.
As the issue of homosexuality was raised, a Supreme Court Judge from Sri Lanka implored the Asian LGBT community to come together in solidarity because HIV is not just “gay or MSM issue”. Justice Shiranee Tilakawardane said that many lesbians were at risk of HIV as acts of rape and sexual violence was commonly used to “cure” lesbians of homosexuality. This reporter, who’s also Fridae’s HIV Programs Manager, made the point that while solidarity among LGBT people was likely to be common goal, laws need to be changed so that LGBT groups within the region can be recognised, thus enabling the community to organise and engage in public discourse. Violence and discrimination as demonstrated by religious fundamentalists across the region highlighted the urgent need for protection of sexual minorities under the law.
Dr Koe noted that while some instances exist where governments have learned to turn a “blind eye” and allowed MSM-targetted HIV programs to run freely despite criminalisation of same-sex acts, true progress can only be made when “champions” from within governments and civil society work together and advocate for change.
Of equal concern during the Dialogue was the way in which the law navigates issues for transgender people. “In the eyes of the law we don’t exist,” Khatini Slamah of the Asia Pacific Transgender Network said bluntly in reference to the failure of many governments to recognise gender identity. “And if we don’t exist,” Slamah explained during the Commission meeting, “how can we stand here and talk to you about rights if you don’t see us.”
Khatini Slamah of the Asia Pacific Transgender Network
addressing delegates during the Town Hall discussion.
Gender reassignment is not legally recognised in many countries in the region, though there are glimmers of progress in India, Nepal and Pakistan. This creates problems for transgender people in day-to-day life when their outward appearance does not match that of the person recorded on national identity cards, passports and other official documents. The consequence is that many transgender people disengage from conventional safety nets and health services set-up for the community. Transgender people are left to fend themselves at the margins of society, with limited options for livelihood. This kind of marginalisation becomes a structural barrier to access care, treatment and support, fanning the flames of HIV risk and transmission among transgender people.
The tension between intellectual property laws, free trade agreements and providing affordable treatment was another hot issue brought before the Commissioners and the region’s lawmakers. Issuing compulsory licenses to free up production of generic HIV medication has been a political lightening rod for the Thai government since the turn of the century. A similar scenario is now playing out within free trade agreement negotiations between India and the European Union. If left unchecked this new bilateral agreement could affect millions of people throughout the Asia-Pacific region who depend on cheap generics for treatment of HIV and other diseases.
The Asia-Pacific Regional Dialogue covered several topics relevant to those most affected by HIV in the region: men who have sex with men, transgender people, sex workers, people who use drugs, women, children and young people. As the Dialogue continued it was clear there were more issues that could fit in one session.
Discussions about protecting people living with HIV from discrimination came late in the day. Activists waited patiently for the chance to share their stories that were charged with emotion and frustration. One story from Princey, a single mother in Sri Lanka who faces intense harassment from health workers and fellow villagers on the sole basis of her HIV status. Other stories came from migrant workers of Sri Lanka and the Philippines who discovered their HIV status during mandatory testing required by visa regulations. These workers were swiftly deported, often in harsh conditions and with little support upon arriving home. For some, their ordeal was compounded by breaches in confidentiality and news of their HIV status and sexual orientation were leaked to others without consent. The Commissioners and their legal colleagues were reminded that all people living with HIV are impeded by restrictions on travel and migration by many countries.
Several commentators from the community repeated the adage that “the laws of the street and the laws on the books are two different things” throughout the session’s proceedings. This acute dichotomy is clearly felt for all the groups most-at-risk of HIV in Asia and the Pacific. A handful of countries have successfully passed laws and policies which recognise the rights sexual minorities, sex workers, people who use drugs or people living with HIV, and yet bigotry and intolerance remain unchecked in offices, villages, schools and clinics within the same jurisdictions.
It was fitting that the Regional Dialogue ended with a civil society representative for young key-affected populations who demanded a place for young people in any debate over laws, human rights and HIV. Skand Amata, Program Officer for the Coalition of Asia Pacific Regional Networks on HIV/AIDS’ Youth Lead Project, reminded the Commissioners that the legacy of HIV is being passed on to a generation who was born in the midst of a global epidemic, and many young people in Asia below the age of 25 – particularly MSM, are living with HIV. He said youth does not mean one is except from infection of HIV, nor should they be denied the right to sexual health. Amata said that if progress is to be had in the fight against HIV then young people need to be involved in the process because the future is in their hands.
The Regional Dialogue was hosted by the Global Commission on HIV and the Law, is jointly organised by UNDP and UNAIDS in partnership with the United Nations Economic and Social Commission on Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).
The next Regional Dialogue for the Global Commission on HIV and the Law is scheduled for the Caribbean in the coming months, with dates for other regions to be announced soon. For further information on the Global Commission on HIV and the Law visit the official website at: www.hivlawcommission.org. A Fact Sheet on the Commission’s Asia-Pacific Dialogue is available for download in PDF format.
Laurindo Garcia is Fridae’s HIV Programs Manager and Manila-based correspondent. All photos courtesy of UNDP Regional Centre, Bangkok.
Related Links
UNDP: Global Commission on HIV and the Law Reviews Legal Barriers Obstructing Progress on AIDS in Asia-Pacific
Punitive and Discriminatory Laws Limit Access to Hiv Prevention And Care Services For Men Having Sex With Men In Asia Pacific
Transgenders Assert Identity At AIDS Meet
NGOs rally against patent law changes: Call on US to stop pressuring Thailand (Bangkok Post)
HIV protesters tell India to defy EU drug demands (AFP)
Asia HIV prevention programmes fail to reach sex workers (Reuters)
Related Articles on Fridae
New evidence shows better healthcare for gay men equals better HIV outcomes for general population
Over 200 participants from 22 Asia-Pacific countries gathered in Bangkok for a historic dialogue hosted by the Global Commission on HIV and the Law. As of now, 90 percent of countries in the Asia-Pacific region still have laws and practices that obstruct the rights of people living with HIV and those at higher risk of HIV exposure.
Delegates watching a video message from UNDP Administrator,
Helen Clark in the main conference room at the UN
Conference Centre, Bangkok. Watch Helen Clark's video message.
All photos courtesy of UNDP Regional Centre, Bangkok.Members of the Asia-Pacific LGBT community, public health workers and civil society came face-to-face with lawmakers, judiciary and police during a rare opportunity to air their grievances and share stories in hopes that a frank discussion on the core issues around HIV might change hearts and ultimately change laws.
The first of six regional dialogues for the Global Commission on HIV and the Law was held in Bangkok on February 16 and 17. The event comes almost midway through the 18-month lifespan of an independent commission, convened with the support of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), and tasked to analyse the critical legal and human rights challenges of the HIV epidemic and recommend remedial policies.
Work started for the Commission in June 2010 and its 14 Commissioners – which include former presidents and members of international judiciary in its line-up – are working towards the goal of delivering key findings and recommendations by December 2011.
Panel discussion during the Asia-Pacific Regional Dialogue
Press Conference (left to right) UNAIDS Executive Director,
Michel Sidibé is the Executive Director of UNAIDS; HIV & the Law
Commissioners Hon. Michael Kirby and Jon Ungphakorn.
:
Observers believe that the credentials and political clout of this independent commission – which count Former President of Brazil, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Parliamentarian Dame Carol Kidu from Papua New Guinea, the Honourable Michael Kirby, former Supreme Court Judge from Australia and Jon Ungphakorn from the Thai Senate among its members – could help convince governments and judiciaries that laws and law enforcement should support, rather than block, effective HIV responses.
During the dialogue, the Commissioners assigned to this first session and their legal counterparts from the region, heard that the burden of HIV is rests on the shoulders of Asian and Pacific Islander gay or bisexual men and other MSM. If current trends prevail, 50-percent of new HIV infections will be among by MSM by 2020, according to a Commission on AIDS in Asia report released in 2008. It is for this reason that various community groups who presented for the Commission advocated so stridently for the decriminalisation of same-sex behaviour.
This localised understanding is timely as scientific evidence released at the 2010 International AIDS Conference supports models of targeted prevention and treatment services for those most-as-risk of HIV infection. The research found that focusing on key-affected populations can result in a decline in on overall HIV prevalence in the general population. Hence governments and public health workers are being urged to “know their epidemic” and provide care and support for those who need it the most.
A preparation session for MSM civil society delegates (left to right)
Hisham Hussein and Raymond Tai from PT Foundation Malaysia;
community representative from Vietnam; Aung Thein, Burnett Institute,
Myanmar; representative from Sangama, India; Edmund Settle,
UNDP Regional Centre Bangkok;
Paul Causey, APCOM; Stuart Koe, Fridae & APCOM.
Dr Stuart Koe, CEO of Fridae and Vice-Chair of the Asia Pacific Coalition on Male Sexual Health (APCOM) attempted to spell out the conflict that is suffered by men who have sex with men and transgender people in the face of HIV.
“Discriminatory actions by public authorities threaten recent progress in addressing the HIV epidemic among these particularly vulnerable populations,” Dr Koe said. "During the past year, police and public security authorities across the Asia Pacific region have increasingly targeted men who sex with men and transgender people with physical and sexual assault, harassment, extortion and sometimes forced blood testing.”
Dr Koe and other community spokespeople from around the region recounted stories of human rights abuses against gay or bisexual men and other men who have sex with men with clear repercussions on HIV risk and access to treatment. Reports from China and the Philippines reveal how police often use charges of sex work as means to harass MSM and transgender people. Charges are often dropped in exchange for extorted money or sexual favours. There are several cases where on-duty HIV outreach workers have been snared by police in South Asia on suspicion of sex work. Possession of condoms was used as evidence of the charges.
Many laws in the region are preventing the distribution of MSM-specific safer sex education information on the basis that these materials contravene strict pornography laws, for example in Sri Lanka and Indonesia. Or similarly in Malaysia and Singapore where censorship codes prohibiting the promotion of homosexuality in the public domain hinder the scaling-up of MSM-specific HIV and sexual health outreach.
As the issue of homosexuality was raised, a Supreme Court Judge from Sri Lanka implored the Asian LGBT community to come together in solidarity because HIV is not just “gay or MSM issue”. Justice Shiranee Tilakawardane said that many lesbians were at risk of HIV as acts of rape and sexual violence was commonly used to “cure” lesbians of homosexuality. This reporter, who’s also Fridae’s HIV Programs Manager, made the point that while solidarity among LGBT people was likely to be common goal, laws need to be changed so that LGBT groups within the region can be recognised, thus enabling the community to organise and engage in public discourse. Violence and discrimination as demonstrated by religious fundamentalists across the region highlighted the urgent need for protection of sexual minorities under the law.
Dr Koe noted that while some instances exist where governments have learned to turn a “blind eye” and allowed MSM-targetted HIV programs to run freely despite criminalisation of same-sex acts, true progress can only be made when “champions” from within governments and civil society work together and advocate for change.
Of equal concern during the Dialogue was the way in which the law navigates issues for transgender people. “In the eyes of the law we don’t exist,” Khatini Slamah of the Asia Pacific Transgender Network said bluntly in reference to the failure of many governments to recognise gender identity. “And if we don’t exist,” Slamah explained during the Commission meeting, “how can we stand here and talk to you about rights if you don’t see us.”
Khatini Slamah of the Asia Pacific Transgender Network
addressing delegates during the Town Hall discussion.
Gender reassignment is not legally recognised in many countries in the region, though there are glimmers of progress in India, Nepal and Pakistan. This creates problems for transgender people in day-to-day life when their outward appearance does not match that of the person recorded on national identity cards, passports and other official documents. The consequence is that many transgender people disengage from conventional safety nets and health services set-up for the community. Transgender people are left to fend themselves at the margins of society, with limited options for livelihood. This kind of marginalisation becomes a structural barrier to access care, treatment and support, fanning the flames of HIV risk and transmission among transgender people.
The tension between intellectual property laws, free trade agreements and providing affordable treatment was another hot issue brought before the Commissioners and the region’s lawmakers. Issuing compulsory licenses to free up production of generic HIV medication has been a political lightening rod for the Thai government since the turn of the century. A similar scenario is now playing out within free trade agreement negotiations between India and the European Union. If left unchecked this new bilateral agreement could affect millions of people throughout the Asia-Pacific region who depend on cheap generics for treatment of HIV and other diseases.
The Asia-Pacific Regional Dialogue covered several topics relevant to those most affected by HIV in the region: men who have sex with men, transgender people, sex workers, people who use drugs, women, children and young people. As the Dialogue continued it was clear there were more issues that could fit in one session.
Discussions about protecting people living with HIV from discrimination came late in the day. Activists waited patiently for the chance to share their stories that were charged with emotion and frustration. One story from Princey, a single mother in Sri Lanka who faces intense harassment from health workers and fellow villagers on the sole basis of her HIV status. Other stories came from migrant workers of Sri Lanka and the Philippines who discovered their HIV status during mandatory testing required by visa regulations. These workers were swiftly deported, often in harsh conditions and with little support upon arriving home. For some, their ordeal was compounded by breaches in confidentiality and news of their HIV status and sexual orientation were leaked to others without consent. The Commissioners and their legal colleagues were reminded that all people living with HIV are impeded by restrictions on travel and migration by many countries.
Several commentators from the community repeated the adage that “the laws of the street and the laws on the books are two different things” throughout the session’s proceedings. This acute dichotomy is clearly felt for all the groups most-at-risk of HIV in Asia and the Pacific. A handful of countries have successfully passed laws and policies which recognise the rights sexual minorities, sex workers, people who use drugs or people living with HIV, and yet bigotry and intolerance remain unchecked in offices, villages, schools and clinics within the same jurisdictions.
It was fitting that the Regional Dialogue ended with a civil society representative for young key-affected populations who demanded a place for young people in any debate over laws, human rights and HIV. Skand Amata, Program Officer for the Coalition of Asia Pacific Regional Networks on HIV/AIDS’ Youth Lead Project, reminded the Commissioners that the legacy of HIV is being passed on to a generation who was born in the midst of a global epidemic, and many young people in Asia below the age of 25 – particularly MSM, are living with HIV. He said youth does not mean one is except from infection of HIV, nor should they be denied the right to sexual health. Amata said that if progress is to be had in the fight against HIV then young people need to be involved in the process because the future is in their hands.
The Regional Dialogue was hosted by the Global Commission on HIV and the Law, is jointly organised by UNDP and UNAIDS in partnership with the United Nations Economic and Social Commission on Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).
The next Regional Dialogue for the Global Commission on HIV and the Law is scheduled for the Caribbean in the coming months, with dates for other regions to be announced soon. For further information on the Global Commission on HIV and the Law visit the official website at: www.hivlawcommission.org. A Fact Sheet on the Commission’s Asia-Pacific Dialogue is available for download in PDF format.
Laurindo Garcia is Fridae’s HIV Programs Manager and Manila-based correspondent. All photos courtesy of UNDP Regional Centre, Bangkok.
Related Links
UNDP: Global Commission on HIV and the Law Reviews Legal Barriers Obstructing Progress on AIDS in Asia-Pacific
Punitive and Discriminatory Laws Limit Access to Hiv Prevention And Care Services For Men Having Sex With Men In Asia Pacific
Transgenders Assert Identity At AIDS Meet
NGOs rally against patent law changes: Call on US to stop pressuring Thailand (Bangkok Post)
HIV protesters tell India to defy EU drug demands (AFP)
Asia HIV prevention programmes fail to reach sex workers (Reuters)
Related Articles on Fridae
New evidence shows better healthcare for gay men equals better HIV outcomes for general population
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