
October 2006 Cover
|
 |
In a bid to control the spread of HIV/AIDS in India, a senior official with the India's National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) has asked the Delhi High Court to throw out a law banning homosexuality. Experts argue the law
is driving India's estimated 2.5 million gay men underground and making HIV prevention difficult.
"MSM [men who have sex with men] is a high-risk group," said the NACO official, who asked not to be named. "Since we are in the field of AIDS prevention, we have asked for the ban to be lifted."
S
ection 377 of the penal code forbids "carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal." Though few persons are actually prosecuted under the code, AIDS activists say the police use it to
harass gays. "Section 377 can adversely contribute to pushing the infection underground, make risky sexual practices go unnoticed and unaddressed," NACO said in its affidavit to the court. "The fear of harassment by
law- enforcement agencies leads to sex being hurried, leaving partners without the option to consider or negotiate safer sex practices."
NACO said it filed the affidavit in support of a petition by AIDS activists seeking to amend the law. Last year, India's government said the country was not ready to accept gays. "Public morality must prevail over the
exercise of any private right," the government told the Supreme Court in December, which sent the matter back to the Delhi High Court.
-- from Agence France Presse
You are not logged in.
No comments yet, but
click here to be the first to comment on this
HIV Digest!
|