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Commitments and conundrums: Human rights and the Global Fund . Joanne Csete, PhD, MPH Columbia Univ. Mailman School of Public Health July 2010. Treating AIDS is NOT a crime!. Tell Iran to free the Alaeis , AIDS physicians wrongfully imprisoned since June 2008
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Commitments and conundrums:Human rights and the Global Fund Joanne Csete, PhD, MPH Columbia Univ. Mailman School of Public Health July 2010
Treating AIDS is NOT a crime! Tell Iran to free the Alaeis, AIDS physicians wrongfully imprisoned since June 2008 Sign the petition at IranFreetheDocs.org Dr. Kamiar Alaei Dr. Arash Alaei
Acknowledgment For extensive comments and funding: • Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network (R. Elliott) • Open Society Institute (J. Cohen, S. Kowalski)
Objective Examine human rights content and impact of Global Fund’s • grant-making processes • grants (program content) • advocacy. Attention to the dilemma of commitment to both “country-driven” processes and human rights
Selected results • CCM as a public-private structure? • Representation of people living with HIV • “Key affected populations,” including criminalized persons, in CCMs and in proposed programs? • Few direct human rights measures in proposals • Women’s rights groups: service delivery vs. advocacy • Scaling up controversial programs (e.g. methadone) • Not retreating on treatment scale-up • Funding of interventions/institutions that raise human rights concerns • Excellent advocacy efforts on many points
People who use drugs (PUD) • PUD represented on few CCMs; even harm reduction organizations often not represented • Through 2009, >$180 million in 42 countries, but few programs on strengthening rights of people who use drugs • Special non-CCM grants in cases where PUD or drug use issues excluded from CCM (e.g. Thailand, Russia) • What can GF do to improve PUD participation on CCMs?
Criminal laws that impede HIV responses • Urgent need for advocacy and action • Require CCM to report on how they affect the HIV response and participation of affected populations • Depending on analysis (previous point), consider a requirement that proposals include support for legal assistance, training of police or judicial officials, etc. • TRP briefing and guidelines
Detention centers for drug “treatment” • Involuntary detention of people who use drugs for “re-education and rehabilitation”; forced labor and repression in guise of “treatment”. • GF grants support HIV services in these centers • M Kazatchkine (Toronto, 2010): “All compulsory drug detention centres should be closed and replaced by drug treatment facilities that work and that conform to ethical standards and human rights norms.” Urgently need national-level advocacy to close these centers. GF needs policy to determine whether support for some services in these settings (and prisons) is possible without reinforcing repression. (Linked to time-bound plan to close down?)
100% condom use programs (100% CUP) • Part of HIV response in many countries (esp. in Asia) • Meant to ensure condoms used in all commercial sex transactions (brothels, nightclubs) • Top-down, designed without sex worker participation • Documented abuses – mandatory testing, police abuse, public humiliation of “violators” • Rights-based alternatives for achieving high condom use. CCMs should explain human rights protections, whether other alternatives tried. Advocacy against repression in programs “for” sex workers; advocacy in favor of sex worker-run programs.
Involuntary sterilization of women living with HIV • Namibia: documented cases of involuntary sterilization in hospitals receiving GF support • Coerced abortions reported in many countries • GF should commission an investigation in Namibia case • Push CCMs to ensure that fund recipients for vertical transmission activities have measures in place to prevent these abuses.
Global Fund response: gender Global Fund Gender Equality Strategy (2008): • CCMs must assess and “declare” their gender capacity; should strive for “sex parity” in membership • Gender analysis in national strategies • Improved gender capacity on TRP • Senior-level Gender Advisor in Secretariat • 2009: Adoption of similar strategy with respect to “SOGI”: sexual orientation and gender identity • Is something more needed?
GF gender-related strategies • Will they be evaluated with an eye toward whether resources flow to programs that strengthen human rights? • If necessary, consider CCM requirements (e.g. CCM membership; evidence of effort to include rights interventions – if no capacity is the problem, prove it and address it; if legal services are needed, include them)
Other means to strengthen rights impact • Community systems strengthening: GF line of funds to support community-based organizations • Dual track financing: Requirement that there be both NGO and government principal recipients of GF grants Both should be evaluated for their impact on “key affected populations”.
Advocacy by the Global Fund • Many positive examples (treatment for all, drug policy reform, incarceration of MSM, HIV status-based travel restrictions) • Much more needed, including on • threats to generic medicine producers, • criminal laws impeding HIV response, • rights-based approaches to sex work and HIV, • ending compulsory drug treatment, • human rights protections in testing scale-up, • activists repressed and imprisoned, etc.
Conclusions • Hard to reconcile the dilemma: commitment to rights-based programs may mean more requirements for applicants • GF has potential to provide ground-breaking leadership on criminalization and marginalization • Important and needed advocacy voice • Need for UN agency representatives on CCMs (and others) to advocate for human rights-based processes and programs