Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 7 – Despite the
fact that the population of European countries outnumbers that of Russia by
more than four to one, Russia now has more HIV-infected people than all of the
European countries taken together, a situation that appears likely to worsen
given that the spread of HIV in Europe is slowing while in Russia it is
intensifying.
But despite the
probability that this reflects the availability of anti-viral drugs in the West
and their declining availability in Russia, Igor Yakovenko says, the members of
the Moscow city duma’s commission on health suggested that Russia was better
off in this regard than Africa and that “all those who raise concerns” about
the increase in HIV infections in Russia “are agents of ‘the information war’”
against Russia (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=55ED00F99F039).
Lyudmila Stebenkova, the head of the
commission, suggested that “the chief hostile agent” in this campaign was Vadim
Pokrovsky, the head of the Federal Center for Fighting AIDS. He has suggested
that the growth in HIV infections in Russia represents “a national threat” and
called for a new campaign against this plague.
Stebenkova and others “with ties to the
Russian authorities have a completely different view.” She, for example, “considers that the chief
means of fighting AIDS is faithfulness to one’s partner and a strong family and
not some kind of prophylactic means or medications, not to speak about condoms
and sex education for young people,” Yakovenko says.
Some people in this camp thus
welcome the ban on imported condoms that the Kremlin has introduced, even
though there have been numerous complains that “import substitute” condoms made
in Russia are ineffective both for their primary and other tasks, the Moscow
commentator adds.
This “union of patriotism and AIDS
is not accidental,” he continues. “Patriotism in its Russian version has much
in common with AIDS.” Both are “parasites on love,” both Have a relationship to
drugs. And both violate immune systems, HIV/AIDS that of the body; Russian
patriotism that of the mind.
Somewhat surprisingly one of the few
Russian officials pushing for anything sensible in this area is Chechnya’s
Ramzan Kadyrov. He has introduced a requirement that all couples applying for
marriage be tested for HIV infection, and he is pushing for the adoption of
requirement elsewhere in Russia (kavpolit.com/articles/v_zags_so_spravkoj_na_vich-19621/).
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