Second International
Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights (Geneva, 23-25 September 1996),
Report of the Secretary-General, E/CN.4/1997/37.
CONTENTS
Introduction
I. CONCLUSIONS OF THE CONSULTATION
II. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DISSEMINATION
AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE GUIDELINES ON HIV/AIDS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
A. States
B. United Nations system
and regional intergovernmental bodies
C. Non-governmental
organizations
Annexes
I. Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights as adopted
by the Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
II. Agenda
III. List of participants
Introduction
1. The Commission on Human Rights, at its fifty-second session, in its resolution
1996/43 of 19 April 1996, requested the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights, inter alia, to continue his efforts, in cooperation with
UNAIDS and non-governmental organizations, as well as groups of people living
with HIV/AIDS, towards the elaboration of guidelines on promoting and protecting
respect for human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS. In the same resolution,
the Commission requested the Secretary-General to prepare for the consideration
of the Commission at its fifty-third session a report on the above-mentioned
guidelines, including the outcome of the second expert consultation on human
rights and AIDS, and on their international dissemination.
2. The call for guidelines on human rights and HIV/AIDS was based on a recommendation
contained in an earlier report of the Secretary-General to the Commission at
its fifty-first session (E/CN.4/1995/45, para. 135), which stated that "the
development of such guidelines or principles could provide an international
framework for discussion of human rights considerations at the national, regional
and international levels in order to arrive at a more comprehensive understanding
of the complex relationship between the public health rationale and the human
rights rationale of HIV/AIDS. In particular, Governments could benefit from
guidelines that outline clearly how human rights standards apply in the area
of HIV/AIDS and indicate concrete and specific measures, both in terms of legislation
and practice, that should be undertaken".
3. In response to the above requests, the United Nations High Commissioner/Centre
for Human Rights and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)
convened the Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
in Geneva, from 23 to 25 September 1996. It may be recalled that the first International
Consultation on AIDS and Human Rights was organized by the United Nations Centre
for Human Rights, in cooperation with the World Health Organization, in Geneva
from 26 to 28 July 1989. In the report of the first consultation (HR/PUB/90/2),
the elaboration of guidelines to assist policy-makers and others in compliance
with international human rights standards regarding law, administrative practice
and policy had already been proposed.
4. The Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights brought
together 35 experts in the field of AIDS and human rights, comprising government
officials and staff of national AIDS programmes, people living with HIV/AIDS
(PLHAs), human rights activists, academics, representatives of regional and
national networks on ethics, law, human rights and HIV, and representatives
of United Nations bodies and agencies, non-governmental organizations and AIDS
service organizations (ASOs). The list of participants is contained in annex
III to the present report.
5. The Executive Director of UNAIDS, Dr. Peter Piot, opened the Consultation
and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mr.�Jos� Ayala-Lasso,
made a closing statement. The Consultation elected by acclamation Mr.�Michael
Kirby (Australia) as its Chairman and Mr.�Babes�Ignacio (Philippines) as its
Rapporteur. The agenda of the Consultation is contained in annex II to the present
report.
6. The Consultation had before it five background papers which had been commissioned
for the purpose of eliciting specific regional and thematic experiences and
concerns regarding HIV/AIDS and human rights, prepared by the following non-governmental
organizations and networks of people living with HIV/AIDS: Alternative Law Research
and Development Center (ALTERLAW) (Philippines); Network of African People Living
with HIV/AIDS (NAP+) (Zambia); Colectivo Sol (Mexico); International Community
of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW+) (global) and Global Network of People Living
with HIV/AIDS (GNP+) (global). The groups were asked, each within its specific
context, to identify the most important human rights principles and concerns
in the context of HIV/AIDS, as well as concrete measures that States could take
to protect HIV-related human rights.
7. The Consultation also had before it draft guidelines on HIV/AIDS and human
rights, prepared by Ms. Helen Watchirs (Australia) on the basis of the five
regional background papers and other materials consulted. In addition, the international
association Rights and Humanity conducted a global survey to review existing
strategies and identify other measures necessary to ensure respect for human
rights in the context of HIV/AIDS. An analysis of the�40�responses received
to the survey was presented to the Consultation.
8. With regard to its methods of work, the Consultation formed four working
groups to discuss and finalize the draft guidelines, focusing on the theoretical
framework (WG.1), the institutional responsibilities and processes�(WG.2), law
review, reform and support services (WG.3) and on the promotion of a supportive
and enabling environment (WG.4), respectively. The full text of the guidelines
as adopted by the Consultation is contained in annex�I to the present report.
The Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights will also be issued separately as
a United Nations publication, in all official languages of the United Nations.
9. In the second part of the Consultation, participants were divided into a
further three working groups in order to discuss and elaborate recommendations
concerning strategies to ensure the dissemination and implementation of the
guidelines, according to different actors, as follows: States (WG.6), United�Nations
system and regional intergovernmental bodies (WG.7) and non-governmental organizations
(WG.8). The attention of the Commission is drawn to these recommendations, as
outlined in chapter II below. [back
to the contents]
I. CONCLUSIONS OF THE CONSULTATION
10. HIV/AIDS continues to spread throughout the world at an alarming rate. Close
in the wake of the epidemic is the widespread abuse of human rights and fundamental
freedoms associated with HIV/AIDS in all parts of the world. In response to
this situation the experts at the Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS
and Human Rights concluded the following:
(a) The protection of human rights is essential to safeguard human dignity in
the context of HIV/AIDS and to ensure an effective, rights-based response to
HIV/AIDS. An effective response requires the implementation of all human rights,
civil and political, economic, social and cultural, and fundamental freedoms
of all people, in accordance with existing international human rights standards;
(b) Public health interests do not conflict with human rights. On the contrary,
it has been recognized that when human rights are protected, less people become
infected and those living with HIV/AIDS and their families can better cope with
HIV/AIDS;
(c) A rights-based, effective response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic involves establishing
appropriate governmental institutional responsibilities, implementing law reform
and support services and promoting a supportive environment for groups vulnerable
to HIV/AIDS and for those living with HIV/AIDS;
(d) In the context of HIV/AIDS, international human rights norms and pragmatic
public health goals require States to consider measures that may be considered
controversial, particularly regarding the status of women and children, sex
workers, injecting drug users and men having sex with men. It is, however, the
responsibility of all States to identify how they can best meet their human
rights obligations and protect public health within their specific political,
cultural and religious contexts;
(e) Although States have primary responsibility for implementing strategies
that protect human rights and public health, United Nations bodies,�agencies
and programmes, regional intergovernmental bodies and non-governmental organizations,
including networks of people living with HIV/AIDS, play critical roles in this
regard.
11. The Consultation adopted Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights, the purpose
of which is to translate international human rights norms into practical observance
in the context of HIV/AIDS. To this end, the Guidelines, as annexed to the present
report, consist of two parts: first, the human rights principles underlying
a positive response to HIV/AIDS and second, action-oriented measures to be employed
by Governments in the areas of law, administrative policy and practice that
will protect human rights and achieve HIV-related public health goals.
12. There are many steps that States can take to protect HIV-related human rights
and to achieve public health goals. The 12 Guidelines elaborated by the Consultation
for States to implement an effective, rights-based response are summarized below.
Guideline 1: States should establish an effective national framework
for their response to HIV/AIDS which ensures a coordinated, participatory, transparent
and accountable approach, integrating HIV/AIDS policy and programme responsibilities
across all branches of Government.
Guideline 2: States should ensure, through political and financial support,
that community consultation occurs in all phases of HIV/AIDS policy design,
programme implementation and evaluation and that community organizations are
enabled to carry out their activities, including in the field of ethics, law
and human rights, effectively.
Guideline 3: States should review and reform public health laws to ensure
that they adequately address public health issues raised by HIV/AIDS, that their
provisions applicable to casually transmitted diseases are not inappropriately
applied to HIV/AIDS and that they are consistent with international human rights
obligations.
Guideline 4: States should review and reform criminal laws and correctional
systems to ensure that they are consistent with international human rights obligations
and are not misused in the context of HIV/AIDS or targeted against vulnerable
groups.
Guideline 5: States should enact or strengthen anti-discrimination and
other protective laws that protect vulnerable groups, people living with HIV/AIDS
and people with disabilities from discrimination in both the public and private
sectors, ensure privacy and confidentiality and ethics in research involving
human subjects, emphasize education and conciliation, and provide for speedy
and effective administrative and civil remedies.
Guideline 6: States should enact legislation to provide for the regulation
of�HIV-related goods, services and information, so as to ensure widespread availability
of qualitative prevention measures and services, adequate HIV prevention and
care information and safe and effective medication at an affordable price.
Guideline 7: States should implement and support legal support services
that will educate people affected by HIV/AIDS about their rights, provide free
legal services to enforce those rights, develop expertise on HIV-related legal
issues and utilize means of protection in addition to the courts, such as offices
of ministries of justice, ombudspersons, health complaint units and human rights
commissions.
Guideline 8: States, in collaboration with and through the community,
should promote a supportive and enabling environment for women, children and
other vulnerable groups by addressing underlying prejudices and inequalities
through community dialogue, specially designed social and health services and
support to community groups.
Guideline 9: States should promote the wide and ongoing distribution
of creative education, training and media programmes explicitly designed to
change attitudes of discrimination and stigmatization associated with HIV/AIDS
to understanding and acceptance.
Guideline 10: States should ensure that government and private sectors
develop codes of conduct regarding HIV/AIDS issues that translate human rights
principles into codes of professional responsibility and practice, with accompanying
mechanisms to implement and enforce these codes.
Guideline 11: States should ensure monitoring and enforcement mechanisms
to guarantee the protection of HIV-related human rights, including those of
people living with HIV/AIDS, their families and communities.
Guideline 12: States should cooperate through all relevant programmes
and agencies of the United Nations system, including UNAIDS, to share knowledge
and experience concerning HIV-related human rights issues and should ensure
effective mechanisms to protect human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS at international
level. [back to the contents]
II. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DISSEMINATION AND IMPLEMENTATION
OF THE GUIDELINES ON HIV/AIDS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
13. At the Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights, the
participants considered strategies for dissemination and implementation of the
Guidelines. It was considered that there are three groups of key actors who,
jointly and separately, are critical to the implementation of the Guidelines,
namely States, the United Nations system, regional intergovernmental organizations
and non-governmental and community-based organizations. Set out below are recommendations
for measures that these actors are encouraged to take in order to ensure that
the Guidelines are widely disseminated and effectively implemented. [back
to the contents]
A. States
14. States, at the highest level of Government (head of State, Prime Minister
and/or relevant ministers) should promulgate the Guidelines and ensure that
the political weight of the Government is behind the dissemination and implementation
of the Guidelines throughout all branches of the executive, legislature and
judiciary.
15. States, at highest level of Government, should assign appropriate governmental
bodies/staff with the responsibility to devise and implement a strategy for
dissemination and implementation of the Guidelines and establish periodic monitoring
of this strategy through, for example, reports to the Executive Office and public
hearings. States should establish within the executive branch a staff member(s)
responsible for this strategy.
16. States should disseminate the Guidelines, endorsed by the executive, to�relevant
national bodies, such as interministerial and parliamentary committees on HIV/AIDS
and national AIDS programmes, as well as to provincial and local-level bodies.
17. States, through these bodies, should give formal consideration to the Guidelines
in order to identify ways to build them into existing activities and prioritize
necessary new activities and policy review. States should also organize consensus
workshops with the participation of non-governmental organizations, community-based
organizations and AIDS service organizations�(ASOs), networks of people living
with HIV/AIDS (PLHAs), networks on ethics, law, human rights and HIV, United
Nations Theme Groups on�HIV/AIDS, as well as political and religious groups:
(a) To discuss the relevance of the Guidelines to the local situation, to identify
obstacles and needs, to propose interventions and solutions and to achieve consensus
for the adoption of the Guidelines;
(b) To elaborate national, provincial and local plans of action for implementation
and monitoring of the Guidelines within the local context;
(c) To mobilize and ensure the commitment of relevant governmental officials
to apply the Guidelines as a working tool to be integrated into their individual
workplans.
18. States, at national, subnational and local levels, should establish mechanisms
to receive, process and refer issues, claims and information in relation to
the Guidelines and to the human rights issues raised therein. States should
create focal points to monitor the implementation of the Guidelines in relevant
government departments.
19. States, in ways consistent with judicial independence, should disseminate
the Guidelines widely throughout the judicial system and use them�in the development
of jurisprudence, conduct of court cases involving HIV-related matters and HIV-related
training/continuing education of judicial officers.
20. States should disseminate the Guidelines throughout the legislative branch
of Government and particularly to parliamentary committees involved in the formulation
of policy and legislation relevant to the issues raised in the Guidelines. Such
committees should assess the Guidelines to identify priority areas for action
and a longer-term strategy to ensure that relevant policy and law are in conformity
with the Guidelines. [back to the
contents]
B. United Nations system and
regional intergovernmental bodies
21. The United Nations Secretary-General should submit the Guidelines to
the Commission on Human Rights as part of the report on the Second International
Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights.
22. The Secretary-General should transmit the Guidelines to heads of State:
(a) Recommending that the document be distributed nationally through the appropriate
channels;
(b) Offering, within the mandates of UNAIDS and the United Nations High Commissioner/Centre
for Human Rights, technical cooperation in facilitating the implementation of
the Guidelines;
(c) Requesting that compliance with the Guidelines be included in the national
reports to existing human rights treaty bodies;
(d) Reminding Governments of the responsibility to uphold international human
rights standards in promoting compliance with the Guidelines.
23. The Secretary-General should transmit the Guidelines to the heads of all
relevant United Nations bodies and agencies, requesting that they be widely
disseminated throughout the relevant programmes and activities of the bodies
and agencies. The Secretary-General should request that all relevant United�Nations
bodies and agencies consider their activities and programmes on�HIV/AIDS in
the light of the provisions of the Guidelines and support the implementation
of the Guidelines at the national level.
24. The Commission on Human Rights and the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Minorities, as well as all human rights treaty bodies, should
consider and discuss the Guidelines with a view to incorporating relevant aspects
of the Guidelines within their respective mandates. Human rights treaty bodies,
in particular, should integrate the Guidelines, as relevant, in their respective
reporting guidelines, questions to States, and when developing resolutions and
general comments on related subjects.
25. The Commission on Human Rights should appoint a special rapporteur on human
rights and HIV/AIDS with the mandate, inter alia, to encourage and monitor
implementation of the Guidelines by States, as well as their promotion by the
United Nations system, including human rights bodies, where applicable.
26. The United Nations High Commissioner/Centre for Human Rights should ensure
that the Guidelines are disseminated throughout the Centre and incorporated
into the activities and programmes of the Centre, particularly those involving
support to the United Nations human rights bodies, technical assistance and
monitoring. This should be coordinated by a staff member with exclusive responsibility
for the Guidelines. Similarly, the United Nations Division for the Advancement
of Women should ensure the full integration of the Guidelines into the work
of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women.
27. UNAIDS should transmit the Guidelines widely throughout the system - to
co-sponsors of the UNAIDS Programme Coordinating Board, United Nations Theme
Groups on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS staff, including country programme advisers and focal
points - and should ensure that the Guidelines become a framework for action
for the work of the United Nations Theme Groups on HIV/AIDS and UNAIDS staff,
including that Theme Groups use the Guidelines to assess the HIV-related human
rights, legal and ethical situation in-country and to elaborate the best means
to support implementation of the Guidelines at the country level.
28. Regional bodies (such as the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,
the Organization of American States, the African Commission on Human and Peoples'
Rights, the Organization of African Unity, the European Commission on Human
Rights, the European Commission, the Council of Europe, the Association of South-East
Asian Nations, etc.) should receive the Guidelines and transmit them widely
among members and relevant divisions with a view to assessing how their activities
might be made consistent with the Guidelines and promote their implementation.
29. Specialized agencies and other concerned bodies (such as the International
Labour Organization, the International Organization for Migration, the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the United�Nations Research
Institute for Social Development and the World Trade Organization) should receive
the Guidelines and transmit them widely among members and throughout their programmes
with a view to assessing how their activities can be made consistent with the
Guidelines and promote their implementation. [back
to the contents]
C. Non-governmental
organizations*
30. NGOs should implement the Guidelines within a broad framework of communication
around HIV and human rights, including through the establishment of ongoing
communication between the HIV/AIDS community and the human rights community
by:
(a) Establishing contacts at the international, regional and local levels between
networks of ASOs and people living with HIV/AIDS and human rights NGOs;
(b) Developing mechanism(s) for ongoing communication and dissemination and
implementation of the Guidelines, such as a bulletin board and/or home page
on the Internet allowing for input and exchange of information on human rights
and HIV and database linkages between groups working on human rights and HIV;
(c) Networking with human rights NGOs at meetings of United Nations human rights
bodies;
(d) Promoting discussion of the Guidelines in their newsletters and other publications,
as well as through other media;
(e) Developing an action-oriented and accessible version(s) of the Guidelines;
(f) Developing a strategy and process for the dissemination of the Guidelines
and seeking funding and technical cooperation with regard to the dissemination.
31. Non-governmental organizations at the regional level should:
(a) Establish or use existing focal points to disseminate the Guidelines, with
popularization and/or training;
(b) Establish a regional "technical group" to introduce the Guidelines
to the region;
(c) Use the Guidelines as a tool for advocacy, interpretation, monitoring abuse
and establishing best practice;
(d) Prepare regular reports on the implementation of the Guidelines to�human
rights bodies (human rights treaty bodies and United Nations extra-conventional
fact-finding mechanisms, such as special rapporteurs and representatives, as
well as regional commissions) and other relevant international agencies;
(e) Bring cases of HIV/AIDS-related discrimination and other violations of human
rights in the context of HIV/AIDS to regional human rights judicial and quasi-judicial
mechanisms.
32. NGOs at the national level, in order to advocate the Guidelines, should
obtain consensus on their acceptance and establish a joint strategy with governmental
and non-governmental partners as a baseline for monitoring the Guidelines, through
the following means:
(a) Hold national NGO strategy meetings on the Guidelines that include human
rights NGOs (including women's organizations and prisoners' rights organization),
ASOs, community-based organizations, networks on ethics, law, human rights and
HIV and networks of people living with HIV/AIDS;
(b) Hold meetings with national governmental human rights organisms;
(c) Hold meetings with national Government (relevant ministries), legislative
and judiciary;
(d) Establish or use existing national focal points to gather information and
develop systems of information exchange on HIV and human rights, including the
Guidelines. [back to the contents]
Annex I
GUIDELINES ON HIV/AIDS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Preamble
This document contains guidelines adopted at the Second International Consultation
on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights, held in Geneva from 23 to 25�September 1996, to
assist States in creating a positive, rights-based response to HIV/AIDS that
is effective in reducing the transmission and impact of HIV/AIDS and respectful
of human rights and fundamental freedoms.
The elaboration of such guidelines was first considered by the 1989�International
Consultation on AIDS and Human Rights, organized jointly by�the United Nations
Centre for Human Rights and the World Health Organization.�(1)
The United Nations Commission on Human Rights and its Sub-Commission on Prevention
of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities have repeatedly reiterated the
need for guidelines.�(2)
Increasingly, the international community has recognized the need for elaborating
further how existing human rights principles apply in the context of HIV/AIDS
and for providing examples of concrete activities to be undertaken by States
to protect human rights and public health in the context of HIV/AIDS.
The purpose of these Guidelines is to translate international human rights norms
into practical observance in the context of HIV/AIDS. To this end, the Guidelines
consist of two parts: first, the human rights principles underlying a positive
response to HIV/AIDS and second, action-oriented measures to be employed by
Governments in the areas of law, administrative policy and practice that will
protect human rights and achieve HIV-related public health goals.
The Guidelines recognize that States bring to the HIV/AIDS epidemic different
economic, social and cultural values, traditions and practices - a diversity
which should be celebrated as a rich resource for an effective response to HIV/AIDS.
In order to benefit from this diversity, a process of participatory consultation
and cooperation was undertaken in the drafting of the Guidelines, so that the
Guidelines reflect the experience of people affected by the epidemic, address
relevant needs and incorporate regional perspectives.
Furthermore, the Guidelines reaffirm that diverse responses can�and should be
designed within the context of universally recognized international human rights
standards.
It is intended that the principal users of the Guidelines will be States, in
the persons of legislators and government policy-makers, including officials
involved in national AIDS programmes and relevant departments and ministries,
such as health, foreign affairs, justice, interior, employment, welfare and
education. Other users who will benefit from the Guidelines include intergovernmental
organizations (IGOs), non-governmental organizations�(NGOs), networks of persons
living with HIV/AIDS (PLHAs), community-based organizations (CBOs), networks
on ethics, law, human rights and HIV and AIDS service organizations (ASOs).
The broadest possible audience of users of the Guidelines will maximize their
impact and make their content a reality.
The Guidelines address many difficult and complex issues, some of which may
or may not be relevant to the situation in a particular country. For these reasons,
it is essential that the Guidelines are taken by critical actors at the national
and community level and considered in a process of dialogue involving a broad
spectrum of those most directly affected by the issues addressed in the Guidelines.
Such a consultative process will enable Governments and communities to consider
how the Guidelines are specifically relevant in their country, assess priority
issues presented by the Guidelines and devise effective ways to implement the
Guidelines in their respective contexts.
In implementing the Guidelines, it should be borne in mind that achieving international
cooperation in solving problems of an economic, social, cultural or humanitarian
character and promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental
freedoms for all, is one of the principal objectives of the United Nations.
In this sense, international cooperation, including financial and technical
support, is a duty of States in�the context of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and industrialized
countries are encouraged to act in a spirit of solidarity in assisting developing
countries to meet the challenges of implementing the Guidelines.
I. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS OBLIGATIONS AND HIV/AIDS
Introduction: HIV/AIDS, human rights and public health
Several years of experience in addressing the HIV/AIDS epidemic have confirmed
that the promotion and protection of human rights is an essential component
in preventing transmission of HIV and reducing the impact of HIV/AIDS. The protection
and promotion of human rights is necessary both to protect the inherent dignity
of persons affected by HIV/AIDS and to achieve the public health goals of reducing
vulnerability to HIV infection, lessening the adverse impact of HIV/AIDS on
those affected and empowering individuals and communities to respond to HIV/AIDS.
In general, human rights and public health share the common objective to promote
and to protect the rights and well-being of all individuals. From the human
rights perspective, this can best be accomplished by promoting and protecting
the rights and dignity of everyone, with special emphasis on those who are discriminated
against or whose rights are otherwise interfered with. Similarly, public health
objectives can best be accomplished by promoting health for all, with special
emphasis on those who are vulnerable to threats to their physical, mental or
social well-being. Thus, health and human rights complement and mutually reinforce
each other in any context. They also complement and mutually reinforce each
other in the context of HIV/AIDS.
One aspect of the interdependence of human rights and public health is demonstrated
by studies showing that HIV prevention and care programmes with coercive or
punitive features result in reduced participation and increased alienation of
those at risk of infection.�(3)
In particular, people will not seek HIV-related counselling, testing, treatment
and support if this would mean facing discrimination, lack of confidentiality
and other negative consequences. Therefore, it is evident that coercive public
health measures drive away the people most in need of such services and fail
to achieve their public health goals of prevention through behavioural change,
care and health support.
Another aspect of the linkage between the protection of human rights and�effective
HIV/AIDS programmes is apparent in the fact that the incidence or spread of
HIV/AIDS is disproportionately high among some populations. Depending on the
nature of the epidemic and the legal, social and economic conditions in each
country, groups that may be disproportionately affected include women, children,
those living in poverty, minorities, indigenous people, migrants, refugees and
internally displaced persons, people with disabilities, prisoners, sex workers,
men having sex with men and injecting drug users - that is to say groups who
already suffer from a lack of human rights protection and from discrimination
and/or are marginalized by their legal status. Lack of human rights protection
disempowers these groups to avoid infection and to cope with HIV/AIDS, if affected
by it.�(4)
Furthermore, there is growing international consensus that a broadly based,
inclusive response, involving people living with HIV/AIDS in all its aspects,
is a main feature of successful HIV/AIDS programmes. Another essential component
of comprehensive response is the facilitation and creation of a supportive legal
and ethical environment which is protective of human rights. This requires measures
to ensure that Governments, communities and individuals respect human rights
and human dignity and act in a spirit of tolerance, compassion and solidarity.
One essential lesson learned in the HIV/AIDS epidemic is that universally recognized
human rights standards should guide policy-makers in�formulating the direction
and content of HIV-related policy and form an integral part of all aspects of
national and local responses to HIV/AIDS.
A. Human rights standards and the nature of State obligations
The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted at the World Conference
on Human Rights in June 1993,�(5)
affirmed that all human rights are�universal, indivisible, interdependent and
interrelated. While the significance of national and regional particularities
and various historical, cultural and religious backgrounds must be borne in
mind, States have the duty, regardless of their political, economic and cultural
systems, to promote and protect all universally recognized human rights and
fundamental freedoms, in accordance with international human rights standards.
A human rights approach to HIV/AIDS is, therefore, based on these State obligations
with regard to human rights protection. HIV/AIDS demonstrates the indivisibility
of human rights since the realization of economic, social and cultural rights,
as well as civil and political rights, is essential to an effective response.
Furthermore, a rights-based approach to HIV/AIDS is grounded in concepts of
human dignity and equality which can be found in all cultures and traditions.
The key human rights principles which are essential to effective State responses
to HIV/AIDS are to be found in existing international instruments, such as the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenants on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights and on Civil and Political Rights, the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
and the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Regional instruments, including
the American Convention on Human Rights, the European Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the African Charter on Human and
Peoples' Rights also enshrine State obligations applicable to HIV/AIDS. In addition,
a number of conventions and recommendations of the International Labour Organization
are particularly relevant to the problem of HIV/AIDS, such as ILO instruments
concerning discrimination in employment and occupation, termination of employment,
protection of workers' privacy, and safety and health at work.
Among the human rights principles relevant to HIV/AIDS are, inter alia:
The right to non-discrimination, equal protection and equality before the law
The right to life
The right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health
The right to liberty and security of person
The right to freedom of movement
The right to seek and enjoy asylum
The right to privacy
The right to freedom of opinion and expression and the right to freely receive
and impart information
The right to freedom of association
The right to work
The right to marry and found a family
The right to equal access to education
The right to an adequate standard of living
The right to social security, assistance and welfare
The right to share in scientific advancement and its benefits
The right to participate in public and cultural life
The right to be free from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment
The rights of women and children.
B. Restrictions and limitations
Under international human rights law, States may impose restrictions on some
rights, under narrowly defined circumstances, if such restrictions are necessary
to achieve overriding goods, such as public health, the rights of others, morality,
public order, the general welfare in a democratic society and national security.
Some rights are non-derogable and cannot be restricted under any circumstances.
(6) In
order for restrictions on human rights to be legitimate, the State must establish
that the restriction is:
(a) Provided for and carried out in accordance with the law, i.e.�according
to specific legislation which is accessible, clear and precise, so that it is
reasonably foreseeable that individuals will regulate their conduct accordingly;
(b) Based on a legitimate interest, as defined in the provisions guaranteeing
the rights;
(c) Proportional to that interest and constituting the least intrusive and least
restrictive measure available and actually achieving that interest in a democratic
society, i.e. established in a decision-making process consistent with the rule
of law.�(7)
Public health is most often cited by States as a basis for restricting human
rights in the context of HIV/AIDS. Many such restrictions, however, infringe
on the principle of non-discrimination, for example when HIV status is used
as the basis for differential treatment with regard to access to education,
employment, health care, travel, social security, housing and asylum. The right
to privacy is known to have been restricted through mandatory testing and the
publication of HIV status and the right to liberty of person is violated when
HIV is used to justify deprivation of liberty or segregation. Although such
measures may be effective in the case of diseases which are contagious by casual
contact and susceptible to cure, they are ineffective with regard to HIV/AIDS
since HIV is not casually transmitted. In�addition, such coercive measures are
not the least restrictive measures possible and are often imposed discriminatorily
against already vulnerable groups.
Finally, and as stated above, these coercive measures drive people away from
prevention and care programmes, thereby limiting the effectiveness of public
health outreach. A public health exception is, therefore, seldom a legitimate
basis for restrictions on human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS.
C. The application of specific human rights in the context of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic
Examples of the application of specific human rights to HIV/AIDS are illustrated
below. These rights should not be considered in isolation but as interdependent
rights supporting the Guidelines elaborated in this document. In the application
of these rights, the significance of national and regional particularities and
various historical, cultural and religious backgrounds must be remembered. It
remains the duty of States, however, to promote and protect all human rights
within their cultural contexts.
1. Non-discrimination and equality before the law
International human rights law guarantees the right to equal protection before
the law and freedom from discrimination on any ground such as race, colour,
sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
property, birth or other status. Discrimination on any of these grounds is not
only wrong in itself but also creates and sustains conditions leading to societal
vulnerability to infection by HIV, including lack of access to an enabling environment
that will promote behavioural change�and enable people to cope with HIV/AIDS.
Groups suffering from discrimination, which also disables them in the context
of HIV/AIDS, are women, children, those living in poverty, minorities, indigenous
people, migrants, refugees and internally displaced persons, people with disabilities,
prisoners, sex workers, men having sex with men and injecting drug users.
Responses by States to the epidemic should include the implementation of laws
and policies to eliminate systemic discrimination, including where it occurs
against these groups.
The Commission on Human Rights has confirmed that "other status" in
non-discrimination provisions is to be interpreted to include health status,
including HIV/AIDS.�(8)
This means that States should not discriminate against PLHAs or members of groups
perceived to be at risk of infection on the basis of their actual or presumed
HIV status. (9)
The Human Rights Committee has confirmed that the right to equal protection
of the law prohibits discrimination in law or in practice in any fields regulated
and protected by public authorities and that a difference in treatment is not
necessarily discriminatory if it is based on reasonable and objective criteria.
The prohibition against discrimination thus requires States to review and, if
necessary, repeal or amend their laws, policies and practices to proscribe differential
treatment which is based on arbitrary HIV-related criteria.�(10)
2. Human rights of women
Discrimination against women, de facto and de jure, renders them disproportionately
vulnerable to HIV/AIDS. Women's subordination in the family and in public life
is one of the root causes of the rapidly increasing rate of infection among
women. It also impairs women's ability to deal with the consequences of their
own infection and/or infection in the family, in social, economic and personal
terms.�(11)
With regard to prevention of infection, the rights of women and girls to the
highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, to education, to
freedom of expression, to freely receive and impart information, should be applied
to include equal access to HIV-related information, education, means of prevention
and health services. However, even when such information and services are available,
women and girls are often unable to negotiate safer sex or to avoid HIV-related
consequences of the sexual practices of their husband or partners as a result
of social and sexual subordination, economic dependence on a relationship and
cultural attitudes. The protection of the sexual and reproductive rights of
women and girls is, therefore, critical. This includes the rights of women to
have control over and to decide freely and responsibly, free of coercion, discrimination
and violence, on matters related to their sexuality, including sexual and reproductive
health.�(12)
Measures for the elimination of sexual violence and coercion against women in�the
family and in public life not only protect women from human rights violations
but also from HIV infection that may result from such violations.
Furthermore, in order to empower women to leave relationships or employment
which threaten them with HIV infection and to cope if they or their family members
are infected with HIV/AIDS, States should ensure women's rights to, inter
alia, legal capacity and equality within the family, in matters such as
divorce, inheritance, child custody, property and employment rights, in particular,
equal remuneration of men and women for work of equal value, equal access to
responsible positions, measures to reduce conflicts between professional and
family responsibilities and protection against sexual harassment at the workplace.
Women should also be enabled to enjoy equal access to economic resources, including
credit, an adequate standard of living, participation in public and political
life and to benefits of scientific and technological progress so as to minimize
risk of HIV infection.
HIV/AIDS prevention and care for women are often undermined by pervasive misconceptions
about HIV transmission and epidemiology. There is a tendency to stigmatize women
as "vectors of disease", irrespective of the source of infection.
As a consequence, women who are or are perceived to be HIV-positive face violence
and discrimination in public and in private life. Sex workers often face mandatory
testing with no support for prevention activities to encourage or require their
clients to wear condoms and with no access to health-care services. Many HIV/AIDS
programmes targeting women are focused on pregnant women but these programmes
often emphasize coercive measures directed towards the risk of transmitting
HIV to the foetus, such as�mandatory pre- and post-natal testing followed by
coerced abortion or sterilization. Such programmes seldom empower women to prevent
perinatal transmission by pre-natal prevention education and an available choice
of health services and overlook the care needs of women.
The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against�Women
obliges States parties to address all aspects of gender-based discrimination
in law, policy and practice. States are also required to take appropriate measures
to modify social and cultural patterns which are based on ideas of superiority/inferiority
and stereotyped roles for men and women. The Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) which monitors the Convention has underscored
the link between women's reproductive role, their subordinate social position
and their increased vulnerability to HIV infection.�(13)
3. Human rights of children
The rights of children are protected by all international human rights instruments
and in particular under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which establishes
an international definition of the child as "every human being below the
age of eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority
is attained earlier" (art.�1). The Convention reaffirms that children are
entitled to many of the rights that protect adults (e.g. the rights to life,
non-discrimination, integrity of the person, liberty and security, privacy,
asylum, expression, association and assembly, education and health), in addition
to particular rights for children established by the Convention.
Many of these rights are relevant to HIV/AIDS prevention, care and support for
children, such as freedom from trafficking, prostitution, sexual exploitation
and sexual abuse since sexual violence against children, among other things,
increases their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS. The freedom to seek, receive and
impart information and ideas of all kinds and the right to education provide
children with the right to give and receive all HIV-related information they
need to avoid infection and to cope with their status, if infected. The right
to special protection and assistance if deprived of his or her family environment,
including alternative care and protection in adoption, in particular protects
children if they are orphaned by HIV/AIDS. The right of disabled children to
a full and decent life and to special care and the rights to abolition of traditional
practices which are prejudicial to the health of children, such as early marriage,
female genital mutilation, denial of equal sustenance and inheritance for girls
are also highly relevant in the context of HIV/AIDS. Under the Convention, the
right to non-discrimination and privacy for children living with HIV/AIDS and
finally the rights of children to be actors in their own development and to
express opinions and have them taken into account in making decisions about
their lives should empower children to be involved in the design and implementation
of HIV-related programmes for children.
4. Right to marry and found a family and protection of the family
The right to marry and to found a family encompasses the right of "men
and women of full age, without any limitation due to race, nationality or religion,
... to marry and found a family", to be "entitled to equal rights
as to marriage, during marriage and at its dissolution" and to protection
by society and the State of the family as "the natural and fundamental
group unit of society".�(14)
Therefore, it is clear that the right of people living with HIV/AIDS is infringed
by mandatory pre-marital testing and/or the requirement of "AIDS-free certificates"
as a precondition for the grant of marriage licences under State laws.�(15)
Secondly, forced abortions or sterilization of women living with HIV violates
the human right to found a family, as well the right to liberty and integrity
of the person. Women should be provided with accurate information about the
risk of perinatal transmission to support them in making voluntary, informed
choices about reproduction.�
(16)
Thirdly, measures to ensure the equal rights of women within the family are
necessary to enable women to negotiate safe sex with their husbands/partners
or be able to leave the relationship if they cannot assert their rights (see
also Human rights of women above). Finally, the recognition of the family as
the fundamental unit of society is undermined by policies which have the effect
of�denying family unity. In the case of migrants, many States do not allow migrants
to be accompanied by family members, and the resulting isolation can increase
vulnerability to HIV infection. In the case of refugees, mandatory testing as
a precondition of asylum can result in HIV-positive family members being denied
asylum while the rest of the family is granted asylum.
5. Right to privacy
Article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights provides
that "No one shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with
his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to unlawful attacks on his
honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against
such interference or attacks". The right to privacy encompasses obligations
to respect physical privacy, including the obligation to seek informed consent
to HIV testing and privacy of information, including the need to respect confidentiality
of all information relating to a person's HIV status.
The individual's interest in his/her privacy is particularly compelling in the
context of HIV/AIDS, firstly, because of the invasive character of a mandatory
HIV test and, secondly, because of the stigma and discrimination attached to
the loss of privacy and confidentiality if HIV status is disclosed. The community
has an interest in maintaining privacy so that people will feel safe and comfortable
in using public health measures, such as�HIV/AIDS prevention and care services.
The interest in public health does�not justify mandatory HIV testing or registration,
except in case of blood/organ/tissue donations where the human product, rather
than the person, is tested before use on another person. All information on
HIV sero-status obtained during the testing of donated blood or tissue must
also be kept strictly confidential.
The duty of States to protect the right to privacy, therefore, includes the
obligation to guarantee that adequate safeguards are in place to ensure that
no testing occurs without informed consent, that confidentiality is protected,
particularly in health and social welfare settings, and that information on
HIV status is not disclosed to third parties without the consent of the individual.
In this context, States must also ensure that HIV-related personal information
is protected in the reporting and compilation of epidemiological data and that
individuals are protected from arbitrary interference with their privacy in
the context of media investigation and reporting.
In those societies and cultures where traditions place greater emphasis on the
community, patients may more readily authorize the sharing of confidential information
with their family or community. In such circumstances, disclosure to the family
or community may be for the benefit of the person concerned and such shared
confidentiality may not breach the duty to maintain confidentiality.
The Human Rights Committee has found that the right to privacy under article
17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights is violated by
laws which criminalize private homosexual acts between consenting adults. The
Committee noted that "... the criminalization of homosexual practices cannot
be considered a reasonable means or proportionate measure to achieve the aim
of preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS ... by driving underground many of the
people at risk of infection ... [it] would appear to run counter to the implementation
of effective education programmes in respect of the HIV/AIDS prevention".�(17)
The Committee also noted that the term "sex" in article 26 of the
Covenant which prohibits discrimination on various grounds includes "sexual
orientation". In many countries, there exist laws which render criminal
particular sexual relationships or acts between consenting adults, such as adultery,
fornication, oral sex and sodomy. Such criminalization not only interferes with
the right to privacy but it also impedes HIV/AIDS education and prevention work.
6. Right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress and its applications
The right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress and its applications
is important in the context of HIV/AIDS in view of the rapid and continuing
advances regarding testing, treatment therapies and the development of a vaccine.
More basic scientific advances which are relevant to HIV/AIDS concern the safety
of the blood supply from HIV infection and the use of universal precautions
which prevent the transmission of HIV in various settings, including health
care. In this connection, however, developing countries experience severe resource
constraints which limit not only the availability of such scientific benefits
but also the availability of basic pain prophylaxis and antibiotics for the
treatment of HIV-related conditions. Furthermore, disadvantaged and/or marginalized
groups within societies may have no or limited access to available HIV-related
treatments or to participation in clinical and vaccine development trials. Of
deep concern is the need to share equitably among States and among all groups
within States basic drugs and treatment, as well as the more expensive and complicated
treatment therapies, where possible.
7. Right to liberty of movement
The right to liberty of movement encompasses the rights of everyone lawfully
within a territory of a State to liberty of movement within that State and the
freedom to choose his/her residence, as well as the rights of nationals to enter
and leave their own country. Similarly, an alien lawfully within a State can
only be expelled by a legal decision with due process protections.
There is no public health rationale for restricting liberty of movement or choice
of residence on the grounds of HIV status. According to current international
health regulations, the only disease which requires a certificate for international
travel is yellow fever.�(18)
Therefore, any restrictions on these rights based on suspected or real HIV status
alone, including HIV screening of international travellers, are discriminatory
and cannot be justified by public health concerns.
Where States prohibit people living with HIV/AIDS from longer-term residency
due to concerns about economic costs, States should not single out HIV/AIDS,
as opposed to comparable conditions, for such treatment and should establish
that such costs would indeed be incurred in the case of the individual alien
seeking residency. In considering entry applications, humanitarian concerns,
such as family reunification and the need for asylum, should outweigh economic
considerations.
8. Right to seek and enjoy asylum
Everyone has the right to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.
Under the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and under customary
international law, States cannot, in accordance with the principle of non-refoulement,
return a refugee to a country where she or he faces persecution. Thus, States
may not return a refugee to persecution on the basis of his or her HIV status.
Furthermore, where the treatment of people living with HIV/AIDS can be said
to amount to persecution, it can provide a basis for qualifying for refugee
status.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees issued policy guidelines in
March 1988 which state that refugees and asylum seekers should not be targeted
for special measures regarding HIV infection and that there is no justification
for screening being used to exclude HIV-positive individuals from being granted
asylum. (19)
The Human Rights Committee has confirmed that the right to equal protection
of the law prohibits discrimination in law or in practice in any fields regulated
and protected by public authorities. (20)
These would include travel regulations, entry requirements, immigration and
asylum procedures. Therefore, although there is no right of aliens to enter
a foreign country or to be granted asylum in any particular country, discrimination
on the grounds of HIV-status in the context of travel regulations, entry requirements,
immigration and asylum procedures would violate the right to equality before
the law.
9. Right to liberty and security of person
Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights provides
that "Everyone has the right to liberty and security of the person. No
one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. No one shall be deprived
of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such procedures
as are prescribed by law".
The right to liberty and security of the person should, therefore, never be
arbitrarily interfered with based simply on HIV status by using measures such
as quarantine, detention in special colonies, or isolation. There is no public
health justification for such deprivation of liberty. Indeed, it has been shown
that public health interests are served by integrating people living with HIV/AIDS
within communities and benefiting from their participation in economic and public
life.
In exceptional cases involving objective judgements concerning deliberate and
dangerous behaviour, restrictions on liberty may be imposed. Such exceptional
cases should be handled under ordinary provisions of public health, or criminal
laws, with appropriate due process protection.
Compulsory HIV testing can constitute a deprivation of liberty and a violation
of the right to security of person. This coercive measure is often utilized
with regard to groups least able to protect themselves because they are within
the ambit of government institutions or the criminal law, e.g.�soldiers, prisoners,
sex workers, injecting drug users and men who have sex with men. There is no
public health justification for such compulsory HIV testing. Respect for the
right to physical integrity requires that testing be voluntary and based on
informed consent.
10. Right to education
Article 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states in part that
"Everyone has the right to education. ... Education shall be directed to
the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect
for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It shall promote understanding, tolerance
and friendship ...". This right includes three broad components which apply
in the context of HIV/AIDS. Firstly, both children and adults have the right
to receive HIV-related education, particularly regarding prevention and care.
Access to education concerning HIV/AIDS is an essential life-saving component
of effective prevention and care programmes. It is the State's obligation to
ensure, in every cultural and religious tradition, that appropriate means are
found so that effective HIV/AIDS information is included in educational programmes
inside and outside schools. The provision of education and information to children
should not be considered to promote early sexual experimentation; rather, as
studies indicate, it delays sexual activity.�(21)
Secondly, States should ensure that both children and adults living with HIV/AIDS
are not discriminatorily denied access to education, including access to schools,
universities, scholarships and international education or subject to restrictions
because of their HIV status. There is no public health rationale for such measures
since there is no risk of transmitting HIV casually in educational settings.
Thirdly, States should, through education, promote understanding, respect, tolerance
and non-discrimination in relation to persons living with HIV/AIDS.
11. Freedom of expression and information
Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights states
in part that "Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without interference.
... Everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall
include the freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all
kinds ... ". This right, therefore, includes the right to seek, receive
and impart HIV-related prevention and care information. Such educational material
which may necessarily involve detailed information about transmission risks
and may be targeted to groups engaging in illegal behaviour, such as injecting
drug use and homosexual behaviour, where applicable, should not be wrongfully
subject to censorship or obscenity laws or laws making those imparting the information
liable for "aiding and abetting" criminal offences. States are obliged
to ensure that appropriate and effective information on methods to prevent HIV
transmission is developed and disseminated for use in different multicultural
contexts and religious traditions. The media should be respectful of human rights
and dignity, specifically the right to privacy, and use appropriate language
when reporting on HIV/AIDS. Reporting on HIV/AIDS by media should be accurate,
factual, sensitive, and should avoid stereotyping and stigmatization.
12. Freedom of assembly and association
Article 20 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights provides that "Everyone
has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association". This right
has been frequently denied to non-governmental organizations working in the
field of human rights, AIDS service organizations (ASOs) and community-based
organizations (CBOs), with applications for registration being refused as a
result of their perceived criticism of Governments or of the focus of some of
their activities, e.g. sex work. In general, non-governmental organizations
and their members involved in the field of human rights should enjoy the rights
and freedoms recognized in human rights instruments and the protection of national
law. In the context of HIV/AIDS, the freedom of assembly and association with
others is essential to the formation of HIV-related advocacy, lobby and self-help
groups to represent interests and meet the needs of various groups affected
by HIV/AIDS, including PLHAs. Public health and an effective response to HIV/AIDS
are undermined by obstructing interaction and dialogue with and among such groups,
other social actors, civil society and Government.
Furthermore, persons living with HIV/AIDS should be protected against direct
or indirect discrimination based on HIV status in their admission to organizations
of employers or trade unions, continuation as members and participation in their
activities, in conformity with ILO instruments on freedom of association and
collective bargaining. At the same time, workers' and employers' organizations
can be important factors in raising awareness on issues connected with HIV/AIDS
and in dealing with its consequences in the workplace.
13. Right to participation in political and cultural life
Realization of the right to take part in the conduct of public affairs,�(22)
as well as in cultural life, (23)
is essential to guarantee participation by those most affected by HIV/AIDS in
the development and implementation of HIV-related policies and programmes. These
human rights are reinforced by the principles of participatory democracy, which
assumes the involvement of PLHAs and their families, women, children and groups
vulnerable to HIV/AIDS in designing and implementing programmes that will be
most effective by being tailored to the specific needs of these groups. It is
essential that PLHAs remain fully integrated into political, economic, social
and cultural aspects of community life.
People with HIV/AIDS have the right to their cultural identity and to various
forms of creativity, both as a means of artistic expression and as a therapeutic
activity. Increasing recognition has been given to the expression of creativity
as a popular medium for imparting HIV/AIDS information, combating intolerance,
and as a therapeutic form of solidarity.
14. Right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental
health
The right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health comprises,
inter alia, "the prevention, treatment and control of epidemic ...
diseases" and "the creation of conditions which would assure to all
medical service and medical attention in the event of sickness".�(24)
In order to meet these obligations in the context of HIV/AIDS, States should
ensure the provision of appropriate HIV-related information, education and support,
including access to services for sexually transmitted diseases, to the means
of prevention (such as condoms and clean injection equipment) and to voluntary
and confidential testing with pre- and post-test counselling, in order to enable
individuals to protect themselves and others from infection. States should also
ensure a safe blood supply and implementation of "universal precautions"
to prevent transmission in settings such as hospitals, doctors' offices, dental
practices and acupuncture clinics, as well as informal settings, such as during
home births.
States should also ensure access to adequate treatment and drugs, within the
overall context of their public health policies, so that people living with
HIV/AIDS can live as long and successfully as possible. PLHAs should also have
access to clinical trials and should be free to choose amongst all available
drugs and therapies, including alternative therapies. International support,
from both the public and private sectors, for developing countries for increased
access to health care and treatment, drugs and equipment is essential. In this
context, States should ensure that neither expired drugs nor other invalid materials
are supplied.
States may have to take special measures to ensure that all groups in society,
particularly marginalized groups, have equal access to HIV-related prevention,
care and treatment services. The human rights obligations of States to prevent
discrimination and to assure medical service and medical attention in the event
of sickness for everyone require States to ensure that no one is discriminated
against in the health-care setting on the basis of their HIV status.
15. Right to an adequate standard of living and social security services
Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that "Everyone
has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being
of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care
and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment,
sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances
beyond his control". Enjoyment of the right to an adequate standard of
living is essential to reduce vulnerability to the risk and consequences of
HIV infection. It is particularly relevant to meeting the needs of people living
with HIV/AIDS, and/or their families, who have become impoverished by HIV/AIDS
as a result of increased morbidity due to AIDS and/or discrimination which can
result in unemployment, homelessness and poverty. If States introduce priority
ranking for such services for resource allocation purposes, then PLHAs and persons
with comparable conditions and disabilities should qualify for preferential
treatment because of their dire circumstances.
States should take steps to ensure that people living with HIV/AIDS are not
discriminatorily denied an adequate standard of living and/or social security
and support services on the basis of their health status.
16. Right to work
"Everyone has the right to work ... [and] to just and favourable conditions
of work". (25)
The right to work entails the right of every person to access to employment
without any precondition except the necessary occupational qualifications. This
right is violated when an applicant or employee is required to undergo mandatory
testing for HIV and is refused employment or dismissed or refused access to
employee benefits on the grounds of a positive result. States should ensure
that persons with HIV/AIDS are allowed to work as long as they can carry out
the functions of the job. Thereafter, as with any other illness, PLHAs should
be provided with reasonable accommodation to be able to continue working as
long as possible and, when no longer able to work, be given equal access to
existing sickness and disability schemes. The applicant or employee should not
be required to disclose his or her HIV status to the employer nor in connection
with his or her access to workers' compensation, pension benefits and health
insurance schemes. States' obligations to prevent all forms of discrimination
in the workplace, including on the grounds of HIV/AIDS, should extend to the
private sector.
As part of favourable conditions of work, all employees have the right to safe
and healthy working conditions. "In the vast majority of occupations and
occupational settings, work does not involve a risk of acquiring or transmitting
HIV between workers, from worker to client, or from client to worker".�(26)
However, where a possibility of transmission does exist in the workplace, such
as in health-care settings, States should take measures to minimize the risk
of transmission. In particular, workers in the health sector must be properly
trained in universal precautions for the avoidance of transmission of infection
and be supplied with the means to implement such procedures.
17. Freedom from cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
The right to freedom from cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
can arise in two situations in the context of HIV/AIDS, namely in the treatment
of prisoners and in connection with violence against women.
Imprisonment is punishment by deprivation of liberty but should not result in
the loss of human rights or dignity. In particular, the State, through prison
authorities, owes a duty of care to prisoners, including the duty to protect
the rights to life and to health of all persons in custody. Denial to prisoners
of access to HIV-related information, education and means of prevention (bleach,
condoms, clean injection equipment), voluntary testing and counselling, confidentiality
and HIV-related health care and access to and voluntary participation in treatment
trials, could constitute cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
The duty of care also comprises a duty to combat prison rape and other forms
of sexual victimization that may result, inter alia, in HIV transmission.
Thus, all prisoners engaging in dangerous behaviour, including in rape and sexual
coercion, should be subject to discipline based on their behaviour, without
reference to their HIV status. There is no public health or security justification
for mandatory HIV testing of prisoners, nor for denying inmates living with
HIV/AIDS access to all activities available to the rest of the prison population.
Furthermore, the only justification for segregation of PLHAs from the prison
population would be for the health of PLHAs themselves. Prisoners with terminal
diseases, including AIDS, should be considered for early release and given proper
treatment outside prison.
Violence against women in all its forms during peacetime and in conflict situations
increases women's and children's vulnerability to HIV infection. Such violence
constituting cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, includes, inter alia,
sexual violence, rape (marital and other) and other forms of coerced sex, as
well as traditional practices affecting the health of women and children. States
have an obligation to protect women and children from sexual violence in both
public and private lives.
II. GUIDELINES FOR STATE ACTION
Set out below are recommended Guidelines for States to implement in order to
promote and protect human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS. These Guidelines
are firmly anchored within a framework of existing international human rights
norms and are based on many years of experience in identifying those strategies
that have proven successful in addressing HIV/AIDS. The normative principles
together with practical strategies provide the evidence and ideas for States
to reorient and redesign their policies and programmes to ensure respect for
HIV-related rights and to be most effective in addressing the epidemic. States
should provide political leadership and financial resources sufficient to implement
these strategies.
The guidelines focus on activities by States in view of their obligations under
international and regional human rights instruments. This is not to deny, however,
the responsibilities of other key actors, such as the private sector, including
professional groups such as health-care workers, the media, and religious communities.
These groups also have responsibilities not to engage in discrimination and
to implement protective and ethical policies and practices.
A. Institutional responsibilities and processes
Guideline 1: National framework
States should establish an effective national framework for their response
to HIV/AIDS which ensures a coordinated, participatory, transparent and accountable
approach, integrating HIV/AIDS policy and programme responsibilities, across
all branches of Government.
Depending upon existing institutions, the level of the epidemic and institutional
cultures, as well as the need to avoid overlapping of responsibilities, the
following responses should be considered:
(a) Formation of an interministerial committee to ensure integrated development
and high-level coordination of individual ministerial national action plans
and to monitor and implement the further HIV/AIDS strategies, as set out below.
In federal systems, an intergovernmental committee should also be established
with provincial/state, as well as national representation. Each ministry should
ensure that HIV/AIDS and human rights are integrated into all its relevant plans
and activities, including:
Education
Law and justice, including police and corrective services
Science and research
Employment and public service
Welfare, social security and housing
Immigration, indigenous populations, foreign affairs and development cooperation
Health
Treasury and finance
Defence, including armed services
(b) Ensuring that an informed and ongoing forum exists for briefing, policy
discussion and law reform to deepen the level of understanding of the epidemic,
in which all political viewpoints can participate at national and subnational
levels, e.g. by establishing parliamentary or legislative committees with representation
from major and minor political parties.
(c) Formation or strengthening of advisory bodies to advise Government on legal
and ethical issues, such as a legal and ethical sub-committee of the interministerial
committee. Representation should consist of professional (public, law and education,
science, bio-medical and social), religious and community groups, employers'
and workers' organizations, NGOs and ASOs, nominees/experts and people living
with HIV/AIDS.
(d) Sensitization of the judicial branch of Government, in ways consistent with
judicial independence, on the legal, ethical and human rights issues related
to HIV/AIDS, including through judicial education and the development of judicial
materials.
(e) Ongoing interaction of government branches with United Nations Theme Groups
on HIV/AIDS and other concerned international and bilateral actors to ensure
that governmental responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic will continue to make the
best use of assistance available from the international community. Such interaction
should, inter alia, reinforce cooperation and assistance to areas related
to HIV/AIDS and human rights.
Commentary on Guideline 1
To be effective, the response to HIV/AIDS must mobilize key actors throughout
all branches of Government and include all policy areas, since only a combination
of well-integrated and coordinated approaches can address the complexities of
the epidemic. In all sectors, leadership must be developed and must demonstrate
a dedication to HIV-related human rights. Governments should avoid unnecessary
politicization of HIV/AIDS which diverts government energy and divides the community
rather than engendering a sense of solidarity and consensus in dealing with
the epidemic. Political commitment to dedicate adequate resources to respond
to the epidemic within States is essential. Equally important is that these
resources are channelled into productive and coordinated strategies. Roles and
lines of responsibility within Government, including for human rights issues,
should be clarified.
Most countries already have national AIDS committees. In some countries, there
are also subnational committees. However, the persisting lack of coordination
in government policy and the lack of specific attention to human rights issues
relating to the HIV/AIDS epidemic suggest a need to consider possible additional
structures or to strengthen and reorient those that exist to include legal and
ethical issues. Several models of coordinating committees and multidisciplinary
advisory groups exist.�(27)
Similar coordination is essential within and between lower levels of Government.
It is necessary to focus such coordination not only in creating specialized
HIV/AIDS bodies, but also in securing a place for HIV/AIDS human rights issues
in existing mainstream forums, such as regular gatherings of Ministers of, e.g.
Health, Justice and Social Welfare. A multidisciplinary body with professional
and community representation should exist to advise Government on legal and
ethical issues. These bodies at the national level should also ensure coordination
with UNAIDS, its co-sponsors and other international agencies (donors, bilateral
donors and others) to reinforce cooperation and assistance to areas relating
to HIV/AIDS and human rights.
Guideline 2: Supporting community partnership
States should ensure, through political and financial support, that community
consultation occurs in all phases of HIV/AIDS policy design, programme implementation
and evaluation and that community organizations are enabled to carry out their
activities, including in the fields of ethics, law and human rights, effectively.
(a) Community representation should comprise PLHAs, CBOs, ASOs, human rights
NGOs and representatives of vulnerable groups.�(28)
�Formal and regular mechanisms should be established to facilitate ongoing dialogue
with and input from such community representatives into HIV-related government
policies and programmes. This
could be established through regular reporting by community representatives
to the various government, parliamentary and judicial branches described in
Guideline 1, joint workshops with community representatives on policy, planning
and evaluation of State responses and through mechanisms for receiving written
submissions from the community.
(b) Sufficient Government funding should be allocated in order to support, sustain
and enhance community organizations in areas of core support, capacity-building
and implementation of activities, including in areas concerning HIV-related
ethics, human rights and law. Such activities might involve training seminars,
workshops, networking, developing promotional and educational materials, advising
clients of their human and legal rights, referring clients to relevant grievance
bodies, collecting data on human rights issues and human rights advocacy.
Commentary on Guideline 2
Community partners have knowledge and experience that States need in order to
fashion effective State responses. This is particularly the case with regard
to human rights issues, as community representatives are either directly affected
by human rights problems or work directly with those who are affected. States
should, therefore, ensure that this knowledge and experience are included in
the development of HIV/AIDS policy, programmes and evaluation by recognizing
the importance of such contributions and creating structural means by which
to obtain them.
The contribution of CBOs, NGOs, ASOs and PLHAs is an essential part of the overall
national response to the epidemic, including in the areas of ethics, law and
human rights. As community representatives do not necessarily possess organizational
ability or skills for advocacy, lobbying and human rights work, this contribution
should be enhanced by State funding for administrative support, capacity-building,
human resource development and implementation of activities. Collection of complaint
data by CBOs and NGOs is vital to inform Governments and the international community
where the most serious HIV-related human rights problems are occurring and what
effective action should be implemented in response.�(29)
B. Law review, reform and support services
Guideline 3: Public health legislation
States should review and reform public health legislation to ensure that
they adequately address the public health issues raised by HIV/AIDS, that their
provisions applicable to casually transmitted diseases are not inappropriately
applied to HIV/AIDS and that they are consistent with international human rights
obligations.
Public health legislation should contain the following components:
(a) Public health law should fund and empower public health authorities to provide
a comprehensive range of services for the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS,
including relevant information and education, access to voluntary testing and
counselling, STD and sexual and reproductive health services for men and women,
condoms and drug treatment, services and clean injection materials, as well
as adequate treatment for HIV/AIDS-related illnesses, including pain prophylaxis.
(b) Apart from surveillance testing and other unlinked testing done for epidemiological
purposes, public health legislation should ensure that HIV testing of individuals
should only be performed with the specific informed consent of that individual.
Exceptions to voluntary testing would need specific judicial authorization,
granted only after due evaluation of the important privacy and liberty considerations
involved.
(c) In view of the serious nature of HIV testing and in order to maximize prevention
and care, public health legislation should ensure, whenever possible, that pre-
and post-test counselling is provided in all cases. With the introduction of
home-testing, States should ensure quality control, maximize counselling and
referral services for those who use such tests and establish legal and support
services for those who are the victims of misuse of such tests by others.
(d) Public health legislation should ensure that people are not subjected to
coercive measures such as isolation, detention or quarantine on the basis of
their HIV status. Where the liberty of persons living with HIV is restricted
due to their illegal behaviour, due process protections (e.g.�notice, rights
of review/appeal, fixed rather than indeterminate periods of orders and rights
of representation) should be guaranteed.
(e) Public health legislation should ensure that HIV and AIDS cases reported
to public health authorities for epidemiological purposes are subject to strict
rules of data protection and confidentiality.
(f) Public health legislation should ensure that information related to the
HIV status of an individual is protected from unauthorized collection, use or
disclosure in the health-care and other settings, and that the use of HIV-related
information requires informed consent.
(g) Public health legislation should authorize, but not require, that health
care professionals decide, on the basis of each individual case and ethical
considerations, to inform their patients' sexual partners of the HIV status
of their patient. Such a decision should only be made in accordance with the
following criteria:
The HIV-positive person in question has been thoroughly counselled
Counselling of the HIV-positive person has failed to achieve appropriate behavioural
changes
The HIV-positive person has refused to notify, or consent to the notification
of his/her partner(s)
A real risk of HIV transmission to the partner(s) exists
The HIV-positive person is given reasonable advance notice
The identity of the HIV-positive person is concealed from the partner(s), if
this is practically possible
Follow-up is provided to ensure support to those involved, as necessary.
(h) Public health legislation should ensure that the blood/tissue/organ supply
is free of HIV and other blood-borne diseases.
(i) Public health law should require the implementation of universal infection
control precautions in health-care and other setting involving exposure to blood
and other bodily fluids. Persons working in these settings must be provided
with the appropriate equipment and training to implement such precautions.
(j) Public health legislation should require that health-care workers undergo
a minimum of ethics and/or human rights training in order to be licensed to
practice and should encourage professional societies of health-care workers
to develop and enforce codes of conduct based on human rights and ethics, including
HIV-related issues such as confidentiality and the duty to provide treatment.
Guideline 4: Criminal laws and correctional systems
States should review and reform criminal laws and correctional systems to
ensure that they are consistent with international human rights obligations
and are not misused in the context of HIV/AIDS or targeted against vulnerable
groups.
(a) Criminal and/or public health legislation should not include specific offences
against the deliberate and intentional transmission of HIV but rather should
apply general criminal offences to these exceptional cases. Such application
should ensure that the elements of foreseeability, intent, causality and consent
are clearly and legally established to support a guilty verdict and/or harsher
penalties.
(b) Criminal law prohibiting sexual acts (including adultery, sodomy, fornication
and commercial sexual encounters) between consenting adults in private should
be reviewed, with the aim of repeal. In any event, they should�not be allowed
to impede provision of HIV/AIDS prevention and care�services.
(c) With regard to adult sex work that involves no victimization, criminal law
should be reviewed with the aim to decriminalize, then legally regulate occupational
health and safety conditions to protect sex workers and their clients, including
support for safe sex during sex work. Criminal law should not impede provision
of HIV/AIDS prevention and care services to sex workers and their clients. Criminal
law should ensure that children and adult sex workers who have been trafficked
or otherwise coerced into sex work are protected from participation in the sex
industry and are not prosecuted for�such participation but rather are removed
from sex work and provided with�medical and psycho-social support services,
including those related to�HIV.
(d) Criminal law should not be an impediment to measures taken by States to
reduce the risk of HIV transmission among injecting drug users and to provide
HIV-related care and treatment for injecting drug users. Criminal law should
be reviewed to consider:
The authorization or legalization and promotion of needle and syringe exchange
programmes;
The repeal of laws criminalizing the possession, distribution and dispensing
of needles and syringes.
(e) Prison authorities should take all necessary measures, including adequate
staffing, effective surveillance and appropriate disciplinary measures, to protect
prisoners from rape, sexual violence and coercion. Prison authorities should
also provide prisoners (and prison staff, as appropriate), with access to HIV-related
prevention information, education, voluntary testing and counselling, means
of prevention (condoms, bleach and clean injection equipment), treatment and
care and voluntary participation in HIV-related clinical trials, as well as
should ensure confidentiality, and should prohibit mandatory testing, segregation
and denial of access to prison facilities, privileges and release programmes
for HIV positive prisoners. Compassionate early release of prisoners living
with AIDS should be considered.
Guideline 5: Anti-discrimination and protective laws
States should enact or strengthen anti-discrimination and other protective
laws that protect vulnerable groups, people living with HIV/AIDS and people
with disabilities from discrimination in both the public and private sectors,
that will ensure privacy and confidentiality and ethics in research involving
human subjects, emphasize education and conciliation and provide for speedy
and effective administrative and civil remedies.
(a) General anti-discrimination laws should be enacted or revised to cover people
living with asymptomatic HIV infection, people living with AIDS and those merely
suspected of HIV or AIDS. Such laws should also protect groups made more vulnerable
to HIV/AIDS due to the discrimination they face. Disability laws should also
be enacted or revised to include HIV/AIDS in their definition of disability.
Such legislation should include the following:
The areas covered should be as broad as possible, including health care, social
security, welfare benefits, employment, education, sport, accommodation, clubs,
trade unions, qualifying bodies, access to transport and other services;
Direct and indirect discrimination should be covered, as should cases where
HIV/AIDS is only one of several reasons for a discriminatory act, and prohibiting
HIV/AIDS vilification should also be considered;
Independent, speedy and effective legal and/or administrative procedures for
seeking redress, containing such features as fast-tracking for cases where the
complainant is terminally ill, investigatory powers to address systemic cases
of discrimination in policies and procedures, ability to bring cases under pseudonym
and representative complaints, including the possibility of public interest
organizations bringing cases on behalf of people living with HIV/AIDS;
Exemptions for superannuation and life insurance should only relate to reasonable
actuarial data, so that HIV/AIDS is not treated differently from analogous medical
conditions.
(b) Traditional and customary laws which affect the status and treatment of
various groups of society should be reviewed in the light of anti-discrimination
laws. If necessary, these should be reformed to promote and protect human rights,
so that legal remedies are made available, if such laws are misused, and information,
education and community mobilization campaigns are conducted to change these
laws and attitudes associated with them.
(c) General confidentiality and privacy laws should be enacted. HIV-related
information on individuals should be included within definitions of personal/medical
data subject to protection and should prohibit the unauthorized use and/or publication
of HIV-related information on individuals. Privacy legislation should enable
an individual to see his or her own records and to request amendments to ensure
that such information is accurate, relevant, complete and up-to-date. An independent
agency should be established to redress breaches of confidentiality. Provision
should be made for professional bodies to discipline cases of breaches of confidentiality
as professional misconduct under codes of conduct discussed below.�(30)
Unreasonable invasion of privacy by the media could also be included as a component
of professional codes governing journalists. People living with HIV/AIDS should
be authorized to demand that their identity and privacy are protected in legal
proceedings in which information on these matters will be raised.
(d) Laws, regulations and collective agreements should be enacted or reached
so as to guarantee the following workplace rights:
A national policy on HIV/AIDS and the workplace agreed upon in a tripartite
body
Freedom from HIV screening for employment, promotion, training or benefits
Confidentiality regarding all medical information, including HIV/AIDS status
Employment security for workers living with HIV until they are no longer able
to work, including reasonable alternative working arrangements
Defined safe practices for first aid and adequately equipped first-aid kits
Protection for social security and other benefits for workers living with HIV,
including life insurance, pension, health insurance, termination and death benefits
Adequate health care accessible in or near the workplace
Adequate supplies of condoms available free to workers at the workplace
Workers' participation in decision-making on workplace issues related to HIV/AIDS
Access to information and education programmes on HIV/AIDS, as well as to relevant
counselling and appropriate referral
Protection from stigmatization and discrimination by colleagues, unions, employers
and clients
Appropriate inclusion in workers' compensation legislation of the occupational
transmission of HIV (e.g. needle stick injuries), addressing such matters as
the long latency period of infection, testing, counselling and confidentiality.
(e) Protective laws governing the legal and ethical protection of human participation
in research, including HIV-related research, should be enacted or strengthened
in relation to:
Non-discriminatory selection of participants, e.g. women, children, minorities
Informed consent
Confidentiality of personal information
Equitable access to information and benefits emanating from research
Counselling, protection from discrimination, health and support services provided
during and after participation
The establishment of local and/or national ethical review committees to ensure
independent and ongoing ethical review, with participation by members of the
community affected, of the research project
Approval for use of safe and efficacious pharmaceuticals, vaccines and medical
devices.
(f) Anti-discrimination and protective laws should be enacted to reduce human
rights violations against women in the context of HIV/AIDS, so as to reduce
vulnerability of women to infection by HIV and to the impact of HIV/AIDS. In
particular, laws should be reviewed and reformed to ensure equality of women
regarding property and marital relations and access to employment and economic
opportunity, so that discriminatory limitations are removed on rights to own
and inherit property, enter into contracts and marriage, obtain credit and finance,
initiate separation or divorce, equitably share assets upon divorce or separation,
and retain custody of children. Laws should also be enacted to ensure women's
reproductive and sexual rights, including right of independent access to reproductive
and STD health information and services and means of birth control, including
safe and legal abortion and the freedom to choose among these, the right to
determine number and spacing of children, the right to demand safer sex practices
and the right to legal protection from sexual violence, outside and inside marriage,
including legal provisions for marital rape. The age of consent to sex and marriage
should be consistent for males and females and the right of women and girls
to refuse marriage and sexual relations should be protected by law. The HIV
status of a parent or child should not be treated any differently from any other
analogous medical condition in making decisions regarding custody, fostering
or adoption.
(g) Anti-discrimination and protective laws should be enacted to reduce human
rights violations against children in the context of HIV/AIDS, so as to reduce
the vulnerability of children to infection by HIV and to the impact of HIV/AIDS.
Such laws should provide for children's access to HIV-related information, education
and means of prevention inside and outside school, govern children's access
to voluntary testing with consent by the child or by the parent or appointed
guardian, as appropriate, should protect children against mandatory testing,
particularly if orphaned by HIV/AIDS, and provide for other protections in the
context of orphans, including inheritance and/or support. Such legislation should
also protect children against sexual abuse, provide for their rehabilitation
if abused and ensure that they are considered victims of wrongful behaviour,
not subject to penalties themselves. Protection in the context of disability
laws should also be ensured for children.
(h) Anti-discrimination and protective laws should be enacted to reduce human
rights violations against men having sex with men, including in the context
of HIV/AIDS, in order, inter alia, to reduce the vulnerability of men
who have sex with men to infection by HIV and to the impact of HIV/AIDS. These
measures should include providing penalties for vilification of people who engage
in same-sex relationships, giving legal recognition to same-sex marriages and/or
relationships and governing such relationships with consistent property, divorce
and inheritance provisions. The age of consent to sex and marriage should be
consistent for heterosexual and homosexual relationships. Laws and police practices
relating to assaults against men who have sex with men should be reviewed to
ensure that adequate legal protection is given in these situations.
(i) Laws and regulations that provide for restrictions on the movement or association
of members of vulnerable groups�(31)
in the context of HIV/AIDS should be removed in both law (decriminalized) and
law enforcement.
(j) Public health, criminal and anti-discrimination legislation should prohibit
mandatory HIV-testing of targeted groups, including vulnerable groups. (32)
Guideline 6: Regulation of goods, services and information
States should enact legislation to provide for the regulation of HIV-related
goods, services and information, so as to ensure widespread availability of
qualitative prevention measures and services, adequate HIV prevention and care
information and safe and effective medication at an affordable price.
(a) Laws and/or regulations should be enacted to enable implementation of a
policy of widespread provision of information about HIV/AIDS through the mass
media. This information should be aimed at the general public, as well as at
various vulnerable groups that may have difficulties in accessing such information.
HIV/AIDS information should be effective for its designated audience and not
be inappropriately subject to censorship or other broadcasting standards.
(b) Law and/or regulations should be enacted to ensure the quality and availability
of HIV tests and counselling. If home tests and/or rapid HIV test kits are permitted
on the market, they should be strictly regulated to ensure quality and accuracy.
The consequences of loss of epidemiological information, the lack of accompanying
counselling and the risk of unauthorized uses, such as for employment or immigration,
should also be addressed. Legal and social support services should be established
to protect individuals from abuses arising from such testing.
(c) Legal quality control of condoms should be enforced and compliance with
the International Condom Standard should be monitored in practice. Restrictions
on the availability of preventive measures, such as condoms, bleach, clean needles
and syringes, should be repealed and the provision of these through vending
machines in appropriate locations should be considered, in the light of the
increased accessibility and anonymity afforded to clients by this method of
distribution.
(d) Duties, customs laws and value-added taxes should be revised so as to maximize
access to safe and effective medication at an affordable price.
(e) Consumer protection laws or other relevant legislation should be enacted
or strengthened to prevent fraudulent claims regarding the safety and efficacy
of drugs, vaccines and medical devices, including those relating to HIV/AIDS.
Guideline 7: Legal support services
States should implement and support legal support services that will educate
people affected by HIV/AIDS about their rights, provide free legal services
to enforce those rights, develop expertise on HIV-related legal issues and utilize
means of protection in addition to the courts, such as offices of Ministries
of Justice, ombudspersons, health complaint units and human rights commissions.
States should consider the following features in establishing such services:
(a) State support for legal aid systems specializing in HIV/AIDS casework, possibly
involving community legal aid centres and/or legal service services based in
ASOs;
(b) State support or inducements (e.g. tax reduction) to private sector law
firms to provide free pro bono services to PLHAs in areas such as anti-discrimination
and disability, health care rights (informed consent and confidentiality), property
(wills, inheritance) and employment law;
(c) State support for programmes to educate, raise awareness and build self-esteem
among PLHAs concerning their rights and/or to empower them to draft and disseminate
their own charters/declarations of legal and human rights; State support for
production and dissemination of HIV/AIDS legal rights brochures, resource personnel
directories, handbooks, (33)
practice manuals, student texts, model curricula for law courses and continuing
legal education, and newsletters to encourage information exchange and networking
should also be provided. Such publications could report on case law, legislative
reforms, national enforcement and monitoring systems for human rights abuses;
(d) State support for HIV legal services and protection through a variety of
offices, such as Ministries of Justice, procurator and other legal offices,
health complaint units, ombudspersons and human rights commissions.
Commentary on Guidelines 3 to 7
Since laws regulate conduct between the State and the individual and between
individuals, they provide an essential framework for the observance of�human
rights, including HIV-related human rights. The efficacy of this framework for
the protection of human rights depends on the strength of the legal system in
a given society and on the access of its citizens to the system. However, many
legal systems worldwide are not strong enough, nor do marginalized populations
have access to them.
Nevertheless, the role of law in the response to HIV/AIDS may also be overemphasized
and provide a vehicle for coercive and abusive policies. Although law may have
an educative and normative role and may provide an important supportive framework
for human rights protection and HIV/AIDS programmes, it cannot be relied upon
as the only means by which to educate, change attitudes, achieve behavioural
change or protect people's rights. Guidelines 3 to 7 above are, therefore, meant
to encourage the enactment of meaningful and positive legislation, to describe
the basic legal components necessary to provide support for the protection of
HIV-related human rights and effective HIV prevention and care programmes and
to be supplemented by all other Guidelines of this document.
Guidelines 3 to 6 encourage law and law reform which would bring national HIV-related
laws into conformity with international and regional human rights standards.
Although the content of the strategies primarily addresses formal law, law reform
should also encompass traditional and customary laws. The process of HIV/AIDS
law review and reform should be incorporated into the State's general activities
regarding the observance of human rights norms and be integrated into the national
AIDS response, whilst involving the affected communities, ensuring that existing
legislation does not act as an impediment to HIV prevention and care programmes
(for the general population, as well as for vulnerable groups) and protecting
individuals against discrimination by both government actors and private individuals
or institutions. It is recognized that some of the recommendations for law and
law reform, particularly those concerning the status of women, drug use, sex
work and the status of men having sex with men, might be controversial in particular
national, cultural and religious contexts. However, these Guidelines are recommendations
to States that are both based on existing international human rights standards
and evolved and designed to achieve, in pragmatic ways, public health goals
in relation to HIV/AIDS. It is the obligation of States to establish how they
can best meet their international human rights obligations and protect the public
health within their political, cultural and religious contexts. The United Nations
High Commissioner/Centre for Human Rights, UNAIDS, its relevant co-sponsors
and other United Nations bodies and agencies, such as the International Labour
Organization, can offer Governments technical assistance in the process of law
review and reform.
Guideline 7 urges that States (and the private sector) encourage and support
specialist and generalist legal services to enable PLHAs and affected communities
to enforce their human and legal rights through the use of such services. Information
and research resources on legal and human rights issues should also be made
available. Such services should also address the issue of reducing the vulnerability
to infection and the impact of HIV/AIDS among vulnerable groups. The location
and format of the information (e.g. plain and understandable language) provided
via such services should render it accessible to members of these groups. Models
exist in many countries. (34)
C. Promotion of a Supportive and Enabling Environment
Guideline 8: Women, children and other vulnerable groups (35)
States should, in collaboration with and through the community, promote a
supportive and enabling environment for women, children and other vulnerable
groups by addressing underlying prejudices and inequalities through community
dialogue, specially designed social and health services and support to community
groups.
(a) States should support the establishment and sustainability of community
associations comprised of members of different vulnerable groups for peer education,
empowerment, positive behaviour change and social support.
(b) States should support the development of adequate, accessible and effective
HIV-related prevention and care education, information and services by and for
vulnerable communities and should actively involve these communities in the
design and implementation of these programmes.
(c) States should support the establishment of national and local forums to
examine the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on women. They should be multisectoral
to include government, professional, religious and community representation
and leadership and examine issues such as:
The role of women at home and in public life
The sexual and reproductive rights of women and men, including women's ability
to negotiate safer sex and make reproductive choices
Strategies for increasing educational and economic opportunities for women
Sensitizing service deliverers and improving health care and social support
services for women
The impact of religious and cultural traditions on women.
(d) States should implement the Cairo Programme of Action of the International
Conference on Population and Development (36)
and the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action of the Fourth World Conference
on Women. In particular, primary health services, programmes and information
campaigns should contain a gender perspective. Harmful traditional practices,
including violence against women, sexual abuse, exploitation, early marriage
and female genital mutilation, should be eliminated. Positive measures, including
formal and informal education programmes, increased work opportunities and support
services, should be established.
(e) States should support women's organizations to incorporate HIV/AIDS and
human rights issues into their programming.
(f) States should ensure that all women and girls of child-bearing age have
access to accurate and comprehensive information and counselling about the prevention
of HIV transmission and the risk of vertical transmission of HIV, as well as
access to the available resources to minimize that risk, or to proceed with
childbirth, if they so choose.
(g) States should ensure the access of children and adolescents to adequate
health information and education, including information related to HIV/AIDS
prevention and care, inside and outside school, which is tailored appropriately
to age level and capacity and enables them to deal positively and responsibly
with their sexuality. Such information should take into account the rights of
the child to access to information, privacy, confidentiality, respect and informed
consent and means of prevention, as well as the responsibilities, rights and
duties of parents. Efforts to educate children about their rights should include
the rights of persons, including children, living with HIV/AIDS.
(h) States should ensure that children and adolescents have adequate access
to confidential sexual and reproductive health services, including HIV/AIDS
information, counselling, testing and prevention measures such as condoms, and
to social support services if affected by HIV/AIDS. The provision of these services
to children/adolescents should reflect the appropriate balance between the rights
of the child/adolescent to be involved in decision-making according to his or
her evolving capabilities and the rights and duties of parents/guardians for
the health and well-being of the child.
(i) States should ensure that child care agencies, including adoption and foster
care homes, are trained with regard to HIV-related children's issues in order
to be able to take into account the special needs of HIV-affected children and
protect them from mandatory testing, discrimination and abandonment.
(j) States should support the implementation of specially designed and targeted
HIV prevention and care programmes for those who have less access to mainstream
programmes due to language, poverty, social or legal or physical marginalization,
e.g. minorities, migrants, indigenous peoples, refugees and internally displaced
persons, people with disabilities, prisoners, sex workers, men having sex with
men and injecting drug users.
Commentary on Guideline 8
States should take measures to reduce the vulnerability, stigmatization and
discrimination that surround HIV/AIDS and promote a supportive and enabling
environment by addressing underlying prejudices and inequalities within societies
and a social environment conducive to positive behaviour change. An essential
part of this enabling environment involves the empowerment of women, youth and
other vulnerable groups to deal with HIV/AIDS by taking measures to improve
their social and legal status, involving them in the design and implementation
of programmes and assisting them to mobilize their communities. The vulnerability
of some groups is due to their limited access to resources, information, education
and lack of autonomy. Special programmes and measures should be designed to
increase access. In many countries, community-based organizations and NGOs have
already begun the process of creating a supportive and enabling environment
in their response to the HIV epidemic. Governments must recognize these efforts
and lend moral, legal, financial and political support to strengthen them.
Guideline 9: Changing discriminatory attitudes through education, training
and the media
States should promote the wide and ongoing distribution of creative education,
training and media programmes explicitly designed to change attitudes of discrimination
and stigmatization associated with HIV/AIDS to understanding and acceptance.
(a) States should support appropriate entities, such as media groups, NGOs and
networks of PLHAs, to devise and distribute programming to promote
respect for the rights and dignity of PLHAs and members of vulnerable groups,
using a broad range of media (film, theatre, television, radio, print, dramatic
presentations, personal testimonies, Internet, pictures, bus posters). Such
programming should not compound stereotypes about these groups but instead dispel
myths and assumptions about them by depicting them as friends, relatives, colleagues,
neighbours and partners. Reassurance concerning the modes of transmission of
the virus and the safety of everyday social contact should be reinforced.
(b) States should encourage educational institutions (primary and secondary
schools, universities and other technical or tertiary colleges, adult and continuing
education), as well as trade unions and workplaces to include HIV/AIDS and human
rights/non-discrimination issues in relevant curricula, such as human relationships,
citizenship/social studies, legal studies, health care, law enforcement, family
life and/or sex education, and welfare/counselling courses.
(c) States should support HIV-related human rights/ethics training/workshops
for government officials, police, prison staff, politicians, as well as village,
community and religious leaders and professionals.
(d) States should encourage the media and advertising industries to be sensitive
to HIV/AIDS and human rights issues and to reduce sensationalism in reporting
and inappropriate use of stereotypes, especially in relation to disadvantaged
and vulnerable groups. Included in such training should be the production of
useful resources, such as handbooks containing appropriate terminology, to eliminate
use of stigmatizing language and a professional code of behaviour to ensure
respect for confidentiality and privacy.
(e) States should support targeted training, peer education and information
exchange for PLHA staff and volunteers of CBOs and ASOs and leaders of vulnerable
groups to raise their awareness of human rights and the means to enforce them.
Conversely, education and training should be provided on HIV-specific human
rights issues to those working on other human rights issues.
(f) States should support the use of alternative efforts such as radio programmes
or facilitated group discussions to overcome access problems for individuals
located in remote or rural areas, are illiterate, homeless or marginalized,
without access to television, films and videos, and specific ethnic minority
languages.
Commentary on Guideline 9
The use of formal standards and their implementation through government process
and law alone cannot change negative attitudes and prejudices surrounding HIV/AIDS
into respect for human rights. Public programming explicitly designed to reduce
stigma has been shown to help create a supportive environment which is more
tolerant and understanding. (37)
The reach of such programming should be a mixture of general and focused programmes
using various media, including creative and dramatic presentations, compelling
ongoing information campaigns for tolerance and inclusion and interactive educational
workshops and seminars. The aim should be to challenge ignorant beliefs, prejudices
and punitive attitudes by appealing to human compassion and identification with
visible individuals. Programming based on fear can be counter-productive by
engendering discrimination through panic.
Guideline 10: Development of public and private sector standards and
mechanisms for implementing these standards
States should ensure that Government and the private sector develop codes
of conduct regarding HIV/AIDS issues that translate human rights principles
into codes of professional responsibility and practice, with accompanying mechanisms
to implement and enforce these codes.
(a) States should require or encourage professional groups, particularly health
care professionals, and other private sector industries (e.g. law, insurance)
to develop and enforce their own codes of conduct addressing human rights issues
in the context of HIV/AIDS. Relevant issues would include confidentiality informed
consent to testing, the duty to treat, the duty to ensure safe workplaces, reducing
vulnerability and discrimination and practical remedies for breaches/misconduct.
(b) States should require individual government portfolios to articulate how
HIV-related human rights standards are met in their own policies and practices,
as well as in formal legislation and regulations, at�all levels of service delivery.
Coordination of these standards should occur in the national framework described
in Guideline 1 and be publicly available, after involvement of community and
professional groups in the process.
(c) States should develop or promote multisectoral mechanisms to ensure accountability.
This involves the equal participation of all concerned (i.e. government agencies,
industry representatives, professional associations, NGOs, consumers, service
providers and service users). The common goal should be to raise standards of
service, strengthen linkages and communication and assure the free flow of information.
Commentary on Guideline 10
The development of standards in and by the public and private sectors is important.
First, they translate human rights principles into practice from an insider's
perspective and reflect more closely the community's concerns. Secondly, they
are likely to be more pragmatic and acceptable to the sector involved. Thirdly,
they are more likely to be "owned" and implemented if developed by
the sector itself. Finally, they might have a more immediate impact than legislation.
Guideline 11: State monitoring and enforcement of human rights
States should ensure monitoring and enforcement mechanisms to guarantee HIV-related
human rights, including those of people living with HIV/AIDS, their families
and communities.
(a) States should collect information on human rights and HIV/AIDS and, using
this information as a basis for policy and programme development and reform,
report on HIV-related human rights issues to the relevant United�Nations treaty
bodies as part of their reporting obligations under human rights treaties.
(b) States should establish HIV/AIDS focal points in relevant government branches,
including national AIDS programmes, police and correctional departments, the
judiciary, government health and social service providers and the military,
for monitoring HIV-related human rights abuses and facilitating access to these
branches for disadvantaged and vulnerable groups. Performance indicators or
benchmarks showing specific compliance with human rights standards should be
developed for relevant policies and programmes.
(c) States should provide political, material and human resources support to
ASOs and CBOs for capacity-building in human rights standards development and
monitoring. States should provide human rights NGOs with support for capacity-building
in HIV-related human rights standards and monitoring.
(d) States should support the creation of independent national institutions
for the promotion and protection of human rights, including HIV-related rights,
such as human rights commissions and ombudspersons, and/or appoint HIV/AIDS
ombudspersons to existing or independent human rights agencies, national legal
bodies and law reform commissions.
(e) States should promote HIV-related human rights in international forums and
ensure that they are integrated into the policies and programmes of international
organizations, including in United Nations human rights bodies, as well as in
other agencies of the United Nations system. Furthermore, States should provide
intergovernmental organizations with the material and human resources required
to work effectively in this field.
Commentary on Guideline 11
Standard-setting and promotion of HIV-related human rights standards alone are
not enough to address human rights abuses in the context of HIV/AIDS. Effective
mechanisms must be established at the national and community levels to monitor
and enforce HIV-related human rights. Governments should see this as part of
their national responsibility to address HIV/AIDS. The existence of monitoring
mechanisms should be publicized, particularly among PLHA networks, in order
to maximize their use and impact. Monitoring is necessary to collect information,
formulate and revise policy, and establish priorities for change and benchmarks
for performance measurement. Monitoring should be both positive and negative,
i.e. reporting on good practice to provide models for others to emulate, as
well as identifying abuses. The non-governmental sector can provide an important
means of monitoring human rights abuses, if resourced to do so, since it frequently
has closer contact with the affected communities. Formal grievance bodies may
be too bureaucratic and their procedures too time-consuming and stressful to
attract a representative sample of complaints. Training is necessary for community
participants to develop skills so as to be able to analyse and report findings
at a level of quality which is credible for States and international human rights
bodies.
Guideline 12: International cooperation
States should cooperate through all relevant programmes and agencies of the
United Nations system, including UNAIDS, to share knowledge and experience concerning
HIV-related human rights issues, and should ensure effective mechanisms to protect
human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS at the international level.
(a) The Commission on Human Rights should take note of the present Guidelines
and of the report on the Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human
Rights and request States to carefully consider and implement the Guidelines
in their national, subnational and local responses to HIV/AIDS and human rights.
(b) The Commission on Human Rights should request human rights treaty bodies,
special rapporteurs and representatives and its working groups to take note
of the Guidelines and include in their activities and reports all issues arising
under the Guidelines relevant to their mandates.
(c) The Commission on Human Rights should request UNAIDS, its co-sponsors (UNDP,
UNESCO, UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and the World Bank) and other relevant United Nations
bodies and agencies to integrate the promotion of the Guidelines throughout
their activities.
(d) The Commission on Human Rights should appoint a special rapporteur on human
rights and HIV/AIDS with the mandate, inter alia, to encourage and monitor
implementation of the Guidelines by States, as well as their promotion by the
United Nations system, including human rights bodies, where applicable.
(e) The Commission on Human Rights should encourage the United Nations High
Commissioner/Centre for Human Rights to ensure that the Guidelines are disseminated
throughout his Office and the Centre and are incorporated into all its human
rights activities and programmes, particularly those involving technical cooperation,
monitoring and support to human rights bodies and organs.
(f) States, in the framework of their periodic reporting obligations to United
Nations treaty monitoring bodies and under regional conventions, should report
on their implementation of the Guidelines and other relevant HIV/AIDS-related
human rights concerns arising under the various treaties.
(g) States should ensure, at the country level, that their cooperation with
UNAIDS Theme Groups includes promotion and implementation of the Guidelines,
including the mobilization of sufficient political and financial support for
such implementation.
(h) States should work in collaboration with UNAIDS, the United�Nations High
Commissioner/Centre for Human Rights and non-governmental and other organizations
working in the field of human rights and HIV/AIDS to:
Support translation of the Guidelines into national and minority languages
Create a widely accessible mechanism for communication and coordination for
sharing information on the Guidelines and HIV-related human rights
Support the development of a resource directory on international declarations/treaties,
as well as policy statements and reports on HIV/AIDS and human rights, to strengthen
support for the implementation of the Guidelines
Support multicultural education and advocacy projects on HIV/AIDS and human
rights, including educating human rights groups on HIV/AIDS and educating HIV/AIDS
and vulnerable groups on human rights issues, and strategies for monitoring
and protecting human rights in the context of�HIV/AIDS, using the Guidelines
as an educational tool
Support the creation of a mechanism to allow existing human rights organizations
and HIV/AIDS organizations to work together strategically to promote and protect
the human rights of people living with HIV/AIDS and those vulnerable to infection,
including through implementation of the Guidelines
Support the creation of a mechanism to monitor and publicize human rights abuses
in the context of HIV/AIDS
Support the development of a mechanism to mobilize grass-roots responses to
HIV-related human rights and implementation of the Guidelines, including exchange
programmes and training among different communities, both within and across
regions
Advocate that religious and traditional leaders take up HIV-related human rights
concerns and become part of the implementation of the Guidelines
Support the development of a manual that would assist human rights and AIDS
service organizations in advocating for the implementation of the Guidelines
Support the identification and funding of NGOs and ASOs at country level to
coordinate a national NGO response to promote the Guidelines
Support, through technical and financial assistance, national and regional NGO
networking initiatives on ethics, law and human rights to�enable them to disseminate
the Guidelines and advocate for their implementation
(i) States, through regional human rights mechanisms, should promote the dissemination
and implementation of the Guidelines and their integration into the work of
these bodies.
Commentary on Guideline 12
The United Nations bodies, agencies and programmes comprise some of the�most
effective and powerful forums through which States can exchange information
and expertise on HIV-related human rights issues and build support among themselves
to implement a rights-based response to HIV/AIDS. States, in their work with
and governance of these bodies, can use these bodies as tools for promoting
the Guidelines. States must, however, both encourage and enable these bodies
through political and financial support, to take effective and sustained action
in terms of promoting the Guidelines and must respond positively to the work
done by these bodies with steps taken at the national level.
CONCLUSION
States are urged to implement these Guidelines in order to ensure respect for
the human rights of those affected by HIV/AIDS and to ensure an effective and
inclusive public health response to HIV/AIDS. These Guidelines are based on
experience gained from best practice which has proven to be effective over the
last 15 years. By implementing these Guidelines, States are able to avoid negative
and coercive policies and practices which have had a devastating impact on people's
lives and on national HIV/AIDS programmes.
The practical aspects of protecting HIV-related human rights are more likely
to be addressed if there is leadership on this issue in the executive and legislative
arms of Government and if multisectoral structures are established and maintained.
Vital to any policy development and implementation is the involvement of affected
communities, together with relevant professionals and religious and community
leaders, as equal partners in the process.
As national legislation provides a critical framework for the protection of
HIV-related human rights, many of the Guidelines relate to the need for law
reform. Another major instrument of social change is the provision of a supportive
and enabling environment within which to conduct HIV-related prevention, care
and support activities. Part of this enabling environment can be obtained by
changing attitudes through general and targeted education, public information
and education campaigns which deal with HIV-related rights, tolerance and inclusion.
Another part of this enabling environment involves the empowerment of women
and vulnerable groups to deal with HIV/AIDS by taking measures to improve their
social and legal status and to assist them to mobilize their communities.
HIV/AIDS continues to challenge our societies in many ways. It requires States,
communities and individuals to ask themselves extremely difficult questions,
which have always been present in our societies, and to seek answers to these
questions. With the advent of HIV/AIDS, we can no longer afford to avoid answering
these questions because to do so threatens the lives of millions of men, women
and children. These questions relate to the roles of women and men, the status
of marginalized or illegal groups, the obligations of States concerning health
expenditure and the role of law in achieving public health goals, the content
of privacy between individuals and between individuals and their Governments,
the responsibility and ability of people to protect themselves and others, as
well as the relationship between human rights, health and life. These Guidelines
are means to give guidance concerning these difficult questions, guidance which
has evolved from the international human rights regime and from the courageous
and inspiring work of millions the world over who have demonstrated that protecting
the human rights of people means protecting their health, lives and happiness
in a world with HIV/AIDS.
Appendix
HISTORY OF THE RECOGNITION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE
CONTEXT OF HIV/AIDS
For many years since the advent of HIV/AIDS, various intergovernmental, non-governmental
and governmental bodies have recognized the important connection between the
protection of human rights and effective responses to HIV/AIDS. Some of these
are briefly described below.
The World Health Organization (WHO) held an International Consultation on Health
Legislation and Ethics in the Fields of HIV/AIDS in April 1988 at Oslo. It advocated
bringing down barriers between people who were infected and those who were not
infected and placing actual barriers (e.g. condoms) between individuals and
the virus. On 13�May�1988, the World Health Assembly passed resolution WHA41.24
entitled "Avoidance of discrimination in relation to HIV-infected people
and people with AIDS", which underlined how vital respect for human rights
was for the success of national AIDS prevention and control programmes and urged
member States to avoid discriminatory action in the provision of services, employment
and travel. Resolution WHA45.35 of 14�May�1992 recognized that there is no public
health rationale for measures which arbitrarily limit individual rights, such
as mandatory screening. In 1990, the World Health Organization conducted regional
workshops on the legal and ethical aspects of HIV/AIDS at Seoul, Brazzaville
and New Delhi. The first of these workshops developed guidelines to evaluate
current and elaborate future legal measures for the control of HIV/AIDS to be
used as a checklist by countries considering legal policy issues. (38)
In November 1991, the WHO Regional Office for Europe and the International Association
of Rights and Humanity held a Pan-European Consultation on HIV/AIDS in the Context
of Public Health and Human Rights in Prague, which considered the Rights and
Humanity Declaration and Charter and developed a consensus statement (the Prague
Statement). Three further consultations on HIV, law and law reform were convened
during 1995 by the WHO Regional Office for Europe, for countries in Eastern
Europe and Central Asia.
The United Nations Development Programme held Inter-Country Consultations on
Ethics, Law and HIV in Cebu (Philippines) in May 1993 and in�Dakar, in June
1994.�(39)
Both of these consultations produced consensus documents reaffirming a commitment
to voluntarism, ethics and the human rights of those affected (the Cebu Statement
of Belief and the Dakar Declaration). UNDP also held Regional Training Workshops
on HIV Law and Law Reform in Asia and the Pacific at Colombo, Beijing and Nadi
(Fiji) in 1995.
Law reform programmes focusing on human rights have been ongoing in countries
such as Australia, Canada, the United States, South Africa and in the Latin
American region, together with networks of legal advocates, practitioners and
activists at governmental and community levels. One concrete achievement of
such groups has been the successful lobbying for general anti-discrimination
legislation at national and local levels which defines disability broadly and
sensitively enough to explicitly include HIV/AIDS. Such civil legislation exists
in the United States, the United�Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong.
In France, such a definition is contained in the Penal Code. Some countries
have constitutional guarantees of human rights with practical enforcement mechanisms,
such as the Canadian Charter of Rights.
The United Nations General Assembly, in its resolutions 45/187 of 21�December�1990
and 46/203 of 20�December�1991, emphasized the need to counter discrimination
and to respect human rights and recognized that discriminatory measures drove
HIV/AIDS underground, making it more difficult to combat, rather than stopping
its spread. The Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention
of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities on discrimination against HIV-infected
people and people living with AIDS presented a series of reports to the Sub-Commission
between 1990 and 1993. (40)
The Special Rapporteur's reports highlighted the need for education programmes
to create a genuine climate of respect for human rights in order to eradicate
discriminatory practices which are contrary to international law. The right
to health can only be implemented by advising people of the means of�prevention
and the Special Rapporteur particularly noted the vulnerable situation of women
and children in the spread of HIV. Since 1989, the Sub-Commission, at its annual
sessions, has adopted resolutions on discrimination against people living with
HIV/AIDS. (41)
The United Nations Commission on Human Rights, at its annual sessions since
1990, has also adopted numerous resolutions on human rights and HIV/AIDS which,
inter alia, confirm that discrimination on the basis of HIV/AIDS status,
actual or presumed, is prohibited by existing international human rights standards
and clarify that the term "or other status" used in the non-discrimination
clauses of such texts "should be interpreted to include health status,
such as HIV/AIDS". (42)
There have also been prestigious academic international studies of HIV/AIDS
and human rights, including by the late Paul Sieghart for the British Medical
Association Foundation for AIDS; (43)
the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard School
of Public Health; and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies; (44)
the National Advisory Committee on AIDS in Canada; (45)
the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO); (46)
the Swiss Institute of Comparative Law; (47)
by the Danish Centre on Human Rights (48)
and by the Georgetown/John Hopkins University Program in Law and Public Health.
(49)
Numerous charters and declarations which specifically or generally recognize
the human rights of people living with HIV/AIDS have been adopted at national
and international conferences and meetings, including the following:
London Declaration on AIDS Prevention, World Summit of Ministers of Health,
28�January�1988
Paris Declaration on Women, Children and AIDS, 30 March 1989
Recommendation on the Ethical Issues of HIV Infection in the Health Care and
Social Settings, Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, Strasbourg,
October�1989 (Rec. 89/14)
Council of Europe, Committee of Ministers, Recommendation R(87)25 to member
States concerning a common European public health policy to fight AIDS, Strasbourg,�1987
European Union, European Parliament and Council Decisions on "Europe Against
AIDS" programme (including dec. 91/317/EEC and dec. 1279/95/EC)
Declaration of Basic Rights of Persons with HIV/AIDS, Organizing Committee of
the Latin American Network of Community-Based Non-Governmental Organizations
Fighting AIDS, November�1989
Declaration of the Rights of the People with HIV and AIDS, United�Kingdom, 1991
Australian Declaration of the Rights of People with HIV/AIDS, National Association
of People Living with HIV/AIDS, 1991
Prague Statement, Pan-European Consultation on HIV/AIDS in the Context of Public
Health and Human Rights, November 1991
Rights and Humanity Declaration and Charter on HIV and AIDS, United�Nations
Commission on Human Rights, 1992 (50)
South African AIDS Consortium Charter of Rights on AIDS and HIV, 1�December�1992
Cebu Statement of Belief, UNDP Inter-Country Consultations on Ethics, Law and
HIV, the Philippines, May 1993
Dakar Declaration, UNDP Inter-Country Consultations on Ethics, Law and HIV,
Senegal, July�1994
Phnom Penh Declaration on Women and Human Rights and the Challenge of HIV/AIDS,
Cambodia, November�1994
Paris Declaration, World AIDS Summit, Paris, 1�December�1994
Malaysian AIDS Charter: Shared Rights, Shared Responsibilities, 1995
Chiang Mai Proposal on Human Rights and Policy for People with HIV/AIDS, submitted
to the Royal Thai Government, September�1995
Asia-Pacific Council of AIDS Service Organization's Compact on Human Rights,
September�1995
Montr�al Manifesto of the Universal Rights and Needs of People Living with HIV
Disease
Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme of Action of the
World Summit for Social Development, March�1995
New Delhi Declaration and Action Plan on HIV/AIDS, Interdisciplinary International
Conference: AIDS, Law and Humanity, December�1995
The formulation of the present Guidelines is a culmination of these international,
regional and national activities and an attempt to draw on the best features
of the documents described above, whilst also focusing on strategic action plans
to implement them. It has been noted that, although some positive measures at
the national level to promote and protect human rights in the context of HIV/AIDS
are in place, a dramatic gap between professed policy and implementation on
the ground exists. (51)
It is hoped that these Guidelines, as a practical tool for States in designing,
coordinating and implementing their national HIV/AIDS policies and strategies,
will assist in closing this gap between principles and practice and be instrumental
in creating a rights-based and effective response to HIV/AIDS. [back
to the contents]
Annex II
AGENDA
1. Opening and welcome address.
2. Election of officers.
3. Adoption of the agenda. (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/1996/L.1).
4. Regional and international perspectives:
(a) Asia: Alternative Law Research and Development Center (ALTERLAW) (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/1996/BP.1);
(b) Africa: Network of African People Living with HIV/AIDS (NAP+) (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/1996/BP.5);
(c) Latin America: Colectivo Sol (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/1996/BP.4);
(d) Global: International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW+) (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/1996/BP.2);
(e) Global: Global Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (GNP+) (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/BP.3);
(f) Global: Rights and Humanity.
5. Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and human rights (HR/SEM.2/AIDS/WP.1).
6. Follow-up and implementation of the guidelines on HIV/AIDS and human rights.
7. Adoption of the guidelines and of the recommendations of the Consultation.
8. Closing address. [back to the contents]
Annex III
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Participants
Aisha Bhatti Rights and Humanity, London
Edgar Carrasco Acci�n Ciudadana contra el SIDA (ACCSI), Caracas
David Chipanta Network of African People living with HIV/AIDS (NAP+), Lusaka
Isabelle Defeu International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW+),
London
Lawrence Gostin Georgetown University, Law Center, Washington
Anand Grover Lawyers Collective, Bombay
Meskerem Grunitzki-Bekele National AIDS Programme, Lom�
Julia Hausermann Rights and Humanity, London
Mark Heywood AIDS Law Project, Centre for Applied Legal Studies, University
of Witwatersrand, Witwatersrand
Babes Igancio ALTERLAW, Manila
Ralph Jurgens Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, Montr�al
Michael Kirby High Court of Australia, Canberra
Yuri Kobyshcha National Anti-AIDS Committee, Kiev
Joanne Mariner Human Rights Watch, New York
Shaun Mellors Global Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (GNP+), Amsterdam
Ken Morrison International Council of AIDS Service Organisations (ICASO), Vancouver
Galina Musat Asociatia Romana Anti-SIDA (ARAS), Bucharest
Sylvia Panebianco Consejo Nacional de Prevenci�n y Control del SIDA (CONASIDA),
Mexico City
Alissar Rady National AIDS Programme, Beirut
Eric Sawyer HIV/AIDS Human Rights Project, New York
Aurea Celeste Silva Abbade Grupo de Apoio a Prevencao a AIDS, Sao Paolo
Donna Sullivan Fran�ois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights,
Boston/New York
El Hadj (As) Sy AFRICASO, Dakar
Helen Watchirs Australian Attorney-General's Department, Barton
Martin Vazquez Acu�a RED-LAC, Buenos Aires
Observers
Jane Connors Division for the Advancement of Women, United�Nations Headquarters
Sev Fluss World Health Organization, Geneva
Angela Krehbiel NGO Liaison Office, United Nations Office at Geneva
Lesley Miller United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Geneva
David Patterson United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), New�York
Mari Sasaki United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Geneva
Frank Steketee Council of Europe, Strasbourg
Janusz Symonides United Nations Scientific, Cultural and Educational Organization
(UNESCO), Paris
Benjamin Weil United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Dakar
Others
Genevi�ve Jourdan Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Geneva
James Sloan International Service for Human Rights, Geneva
Jacek Tsyko Permanent Mission of Poland to the United�Nations Office at Geneva
Notes
1. Report of an International Consultation on AIDS and
Human Rights, Geneva, 26 to 28 July 1989 (HR/PUB/90/2).
2. 0/ For reports and resolutions on HIV/AIDS and
human rights of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and its Sub-Commission
on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, see the appendix
to the present annex.
3. J. Dwyer, "Legislating AIDS Away: The Limited Role
of Legal Persuasion in Minimizing the Spread of HIV", in 9 Journal of
Contemporary Health Law and Policy 167�(1993).
4. For the purposes of these Guidelines, these groups will
be referred to as "vulnerable" groups although it is recognized that
the degree and source of vulnerability of these groups varies widely within
countries and across regions.
5. A/CONF.157/24 (Part I), chap.�III.
6. 0/ These include the right to life, freedom from
torture, freedom from enslavement or servitude, protection from imprisonment
for debt, freedom from retroactive penal laws, the right to recognition as a
person before the law and the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.
7. 0/ P. Sieghart, AIDS and Human Rights: A UK
Perspective, British Medical Association Foundation for AIDS, London, 1989,
pp. 12-25.
8. 0/ See, inter alia, Commission on Human
Rights resolutions 1995/44 of 3 March 1995 and 1996/43 of 19 April 1996.
9. 0/ Other groups singled out for discriminatory
measures in the context of HIV/AIDS, such as mandatory screening, are the military,
police, peace-keeping forces, pregnant women, hospital patients, tourists, performers,
people with haemophilia, tuberculosis or sexually transmitted diseases (STDs),
truck drivers and scholarship-holders. Their partners, families, friends and
care providers may also be subject to discrimination based on presumed HIV status.
10. 0/ Human Rights Committee, General Comment No.
18�(37). Official Records of the General�Assembly, Forty-fifth Session, Supplement
No.�40 (A/45/40), vol.�I, annex�VI�A.
11. 0/ See report of the Expert Group Meeting on
Women and HIV/AIDS and the Role of National Machinery for the Advancement of
Women, convened by the Division for the Advancement of Women, Vienna, 24-28
September 1990 (EGM/AIDS/1990/1).
12. 0/ Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action,
Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, 4/5�September 1995, (A/CONF.177/20).
13. 0/ CEDAW, General Recommendation No. 15 (ninth
session, 1990). Official Records of the General Assembly, Forty-fifth Session,
Supplement No.�38 (A/45/38), chap.�IV.
14. 0/ Article 16, Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
15. 0/ People living with HIV/AIDS should be able
to marry and engage in sexual relations whose nature does not impose a risk
of infection to their partners. People living with HIV/AIDS, like all people
who know or suspect that they are HIV-positive, have a responsibility, for example
by practising abstinence or safer sex, not to expose others unknowingly to infection.
16. 0/ The chance of a woman living with HIV giving
birth to an HIV-positive baby is approximately 1 in 3. This rate may be significantly
reduced if the woman is able to undergo pre- and post-natal treatment with anti-retrovirals.
Since extremely difficult and complex ethical and personal decisions are involved,
the choice to have a child should be left to the woman, with input from her
partner, if possible.
17. 0/ Human Rights Committee, Communication No.
488/1991, Nicholas Toonan v. Australia (views adopted on 31�March�1994,
fiftieth session). Official Records of the General�Assembly, Forty-ninth
Session, Supplement No.�40 (A/49/40), vol.�II, annex�IX EE, para.�8.5.
18. 0/ WHO International Health Regulations (1969).
19. UNHCR Health Policy on AIDS, 15 February 1988 (UNHCR/IDM).
20. 0/ Human Rights Committee, General Comment No.�18(37)
op. cit.
21. M. Alexander, "Information and Education Laws",
in Dr. Jayasuriya (ed.) HIV, Law, Ethics and Human Rights, UNDP, New
Delhi, 1995, p. 54.
22. Article 25 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights.
23. Article 15 of the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights.
24. Article 12, International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights.
25. Article 23, Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
26. Consultation on AIDS and the Workplace (World Health
Organization, in association with the International Labour Organization), Geneva,
1988, sect. II, Introduction.
27. A successful example of an interministerial coordinating
committee is the National AIDS Prevention and Control Committee chaired by the
Prime Minister in Thailand since 1991. Other models are the Federal Parliamentary
Liaison Group in Australia, the National AIDS Coordinating Council in Western
Samoa, the Philippine National AIDS Council and the National Commission on AIDS
in the United States. Another noteworthy example is the National Anti-AIDS Committee
established by the President of the Ukraine as a special State authority.
28. See section I, Introduction, for a listing of vulnerable
groups.
29. 0See Guideline 11 below.
30. See Guideline 10 below.
31. 0See Section I, Introduction, for a listing of vulnerable
groups.
32. 0In addition to the vulnerable groups listed in section
I, specific employment groups should also be protected from such targeted testing,
e.g. truck drivers, sailors, hospitality/tourist industry workers and military.
33. 0See J. Godwin (et al), Australian HIV/AIDS Legal
Guide, (2nd�edition), Federation Press, Sydney, 1993; Lambda Legal Defense
and Education Fund Inc., AIDS Legal Guide: A Professional Resource on AIDS-related
Legal Issues and Discrimination, New York.
34. 0Models include the Group for Life (Grupo Pela Vidda)
in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which offers free legal services, brochures, bulletins,
telephone hot-line and media campaigns. Legal rights brochures have been produced
in the United Kingdom by the Terrence Higgins Trust and Immunity's Legal Centre
(D. Taylor (ed.), HIV, You and the Law). Resource directories have been
produced in the United States by the American Bar Association (Directory
of Legal Resources for People with AIDS & HIV, AIDS Coordination Project,
Washington D.C., 1991) and the Gay Men's Health Crisis (M. Holtzman, (ed.),
Legal Services Referral Directory for People with AIDS, New York, 1991).
Several other organizations in the United States have produced practitioners'
or volunteers' training manuals, such as the Whitman-Walker Clinic (Washington,
D.C.), AIDS Project (Los Angeles), the National Lawyers Guild, State AIDS Legal
Services Organization (San Francisco) and the American Civil Liberties Union
(William Rubenstein, Ruth Eisenberg and Lawrence Gostin, The Rights of Persons
Living with HIV/AIDS (Southern Illinois Press, Carbondale, Illinois, 1996)).
A manual for paralegals is being prepared in South Africa by the Pietermaritzburg
branch of Lawyers for Human Rights with the assistance of the AIDS Law Project
and with training coordination being provided by the AIDS Legal Network. Other
resources include benchbooks for judges (A.R. Rubenfield, (ed.), AIDS Benchbook,
National Judicial College, American Bar Association, Reno, Nevada, January 1991),
the Southern Africa AIDS Information Dissemination Service and newsletters such
as the Canadian HIV/AIDS Policy and Law Newsletter and Australia's Legal
Link (see also AIDS/STD Health Promotion Exchange, Royal Tropical Institute,
the Netherlands).
35. 0See Section I, Introduction, for a listing of vulnerable
groups.
36. A/CONF.171/13, chap. I, resolution 1, annex.
37. Professor R. Feachem, Valuing the Past, Investing
in the Future: Evaluation of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy 1993-4 to 1995-6,
Commonwealth Department of Human Services and Health, September 1995, Canberra,
pp.�190-192.
38. 0See WHO document RS/90/GE/11(KOR).
39. 0R. Glick (ed.), Inter-Country Consultation on Ethics,
Law and HIV (Cebu), New Delhi, India, 1995; UNDP, Inter-Country Consultation
on Ethics, Law and HIV (Dakar), Senegal, 1995.
40. 0E/CN.4/Sub.2/1990/9, E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/10, E/CN.4/Sub.2/1992/10
and E/CN.4/Sub.2/1993/9.
41. 0Sub-Commission resolutions and decisions 1989/17, 1990/118,
1991/109, 1992/108, 1993/31, 1994/29, 1995/21, 1996/33.
42. 0Commission on Human Rights resolutions 1990/65, 1992/56,
1993/53, 1994/49, 1995/44 and 1996/43. Relevant reports of the Secretary-General
submitted to the Commission on Human Rights are E/CN.4/1995/45 and E/CN.4/1996/44.
43. 0P. Sieghart, op. cit.
44. 0International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies, AIDS, Health and Human Rights: An Explanatory Manual, Geneva,�1995.
See, in particular, p. 43 on the Four-Step Impact Assessment of Public Health
and Human Rights.
45. 0HIV and Human Rights in Canada, submitted to
the Minister of National Health and Welfare, January 1992.
46. 0PAHO, Ethics and Law in the Study of AIDS, Scientific
Publication No. 530, Washington, D.C., 1992.
47. 0Swiss Institute of Comparative Law (Lausanne), Comparative
Study on Discrimination of Persons Infected with HIV or Suffering from AIDS,
Council of Europe, Steering Committee for Human Rights, CDDH (92) 14 Rev. Bil.,
Strasbourg, September�1992.
48. 0Danish Centre on Human Rights, AIDS and Human Rights,
Akademisk Forlag, Copenhagen, 1988.
49. 0L. Gostin and Z. Lazzarini, Public Health and Human
Rights in the HIV Pandemic, Oxford University Press, 1997.
50. 0United Nations document E/CN.4/1992/82, annex.
51. 0See E/CN.4/1995/45 and E/CN.4/1996/44.