Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 24 – The Russian
authorities have not been able to stop the HIV/AIDS epidemic, Iskander Yasaveyev
says. Indeed, they appear to be making it worse because “the rhetoric of
‘traditional values’ … used by the Russian authorities not only hasn’t
restrained the growth of HIV but on the contrary has promoted it.”
That is because, the Kazan-based
sociologist who is associated with the Higher School of Economics says, these
“values” prevent “the sexual education of young people, the discussion of the
use of condoms, and the widespread use of programs [such as needle replacement]
to reduce the harm in the use of narcotics” (idelreal.org/a/28634666.html).
Last year, there were 103,000 new
cases of HIV infection in the Russian Federation, 5.4 percent more than the
year before and not including those identified anonymously, Yasaveyev reports,
concluding that “this means that protecting people against HIV infections in
Russia is ineffective.”
Moreover, he reports, only 286,000
of the almost 900,000 residents of Russia who have been diagnosed with HIV/AIDS
are receiving anti-retroviral medications. Some have even been forced to go to
court to try to force government hospitals to provide them with these
life-saving drugs.
In this article, however, Yasaveyev
focuses on two things: the overly bureaucratic and traditionalist approach to
efforts to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and the continuing exclusion and
mistreatment of those who have been infected.
The researcher notes that films and
other programs intended to fight HIV/AIDS never discuss safe sex in a serious
way and never even mention the use of condoms, something many
traditionally-oriented Russians oppose and that are either of low,
domestically-produced quality, or of higher quality but imported and more
expensive.
But what is even worse, he suggests,
is that government propaganda in this area reinforces a number of mistaken
views about how HIV infections spread and thus gives aid and comfort to those
who want to exclude anyone infected with the disease from any contacts with
others.
Indeed, Yasaveyev says, in the past
few months alone, he has heard of several cases in Kazan alone where employers
fired workers as soon as it was discovered that they were infected with HIV.
Nothing happened to the employers who did this, thus sending a powerful signal
to those infected that they must hide from others – and not risk getting
treatment.
That in turn means that as a result
of the traditional values that inform this Russian government effort more
people will die rather than receive the treatment they need.
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