Anti-LGBTQ+ laws are impeding elimination of Aids, UN says
Source: The Guardian
Anti-LGBTQ+ laws are impeding elimination of Aids, UN says
In countries that criminalise gay sex, HIV infection rates are higher and access to lifesaving drugs and services are denied
Sarah Johnson
Fri 1 Dec 2023 14.00 GMT
Anti-homosexuality laws stop people from accessing lifesaving health services and seriously impede progress on eliminating HIV, a senior UN official has said.
Sixty-seven countries have laws that criminalise gay sex, and nearly half are in Africa, the continent most affected by HIV. In those countries, prevalence rates are about five times higher among gay men than in countries where same-sex relations are not criminalised, according to figures from UNAids.
When LGBTQ+ people and other marginalised communities are stigmatised and criminalised, their access to lifesaving health services is obstructed, and the HIV response is undermined, said Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of UNAids.
Earlier this year, Uganda passed one of the worlds harshest anti-LGBTQ+ laws, making gay sex punishable by life in prison, and aggravated homosexuality which includes transmitting HIV punishable by death. It also criminalises any person who fails to report same-sex acts to the police.
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Read more: https://archive.is/UUthE
Original Guardian link (registration required): https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/dec/01/anti-lgbtq-laws-are-impeding-elimination-of-aids-un-says