A
legal provision that led to mass arrests of HIV-positive women in
Greece in 2012 has been reinstated, causing widespread condemnation
by local and international organizations and human rights advocates.
Provision
No 39A was voted by former socialist Health Minister Andreas Loverdos
in April 2012 and led to an unprecedented case of HIV criminalization
a few weeks later when the Greek police in cooperation with the
country’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, KEELPNO,
rounded up hundreds of women from the center of Athens and
force-tested them for HIV inside police stations.
A total of 30 who tested positive were imprisoned on charges of felony and prostitution, in spite of a lack of significant evidence that they had been working as prostitutes or that they had infected anyone with the virus. Their mug-shots and personal data were then published upon order by a prosecutor on the Greek police website as well as on major TV channels.
A total of 30 who tested positive were imprisoned on charges of felony and prostitution, in spite of a lack of significant evidence that they had been working as prostitutes or that they had infected anyone with the virus. Their mug-shots and personal data were then published upon order by a prosecutor on the Greek police website as well as on major TV channels.
The
arrests prompted an international backlash against the Greek
government when organizations like Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch, the European AIDS Treatment Group and UNAIDS called for
the withdrawal of laws that enabled the targeting of HIV-positive
people labeling them unproductive and in violation of international
conventions.
The
women were held in prison for a months-long detention period under
inhumane conditions. The charges have since been dropped or reduced
in the courts.
After
months of negotiations following Loverdos’ exit from the government
and socialist PASOK party, non-governmental organizations and
activist groups in Greece scored a victory in May 2013, when former
Deputy Health Minister Foteini Skopouli finally repealed the
provision.
The
move was welcomed as a step toward correcting the damage inflicted on
the country’s medical services by the 2012 arrests. Drug
rehabilitation groups, which have been hit hard by austerity cuts,
have repeatedly complained that the arrests had serious implications
in the exercise of their outreach work among vulnerable groups.
But
last Tuesday, newly-appointed health minister Adonis Georgiadis (pictured above),
formerly a member of the far-right LAOS partly and currently a New
Democracy majority party MP, reinstated the provision unexpectedly,
the day after his swearing-in ceremony that followed a cabinet
reshuffle of the country’s coalition government. In a short
announcement, KEELPNO welcomed the reinstatement citing a necessity
to “cover the country” until revisions to the provision were
agreed on. Georgiadis addressed the reinstatement on twitter, saying
the repeal by Skopouli had left a “legal void.”
But
the legal grounds upon which the provision was voted into law were
questionable. Last year, Loverdos signed 39A alone, in spite of a
legal requirement for a minimum of four official signatures in order
for a provision to be enacted into law.
At
the time, he claimed that its content had originated in a 1940
regulation, which allowed for sanitation measures in public places
for the protection of public health. However, new language included
in 39A, pointed at immigrants, homeless people, intravenous drug
users and sex workers as possible sources of epidemics. 39A also
cited a need to perform mandatory tests on individuals from these
groups as part of controlling diseases that are currently not endemic
in Greece, such as malaria, polio and sexually transmitted diseases,
including HIV.
Greece
has seen a spike in HIV infections among injecting drug users during
the crisis, mostly in the country’s capital, although there is no
official data on a significant rise among sex workers or undocumented
immigrants. Men who have sex with men remain the main population
group that suffers most of the country’s new HIV infections.
In
spite of citing a need for mandatory testing, the provision is also
unclear about the nature of measures that the police and health
authorities should take in order to test individuals without their
informed consent. A law-suit has been brought by some of the women
arrested in 2012 and by Greek NGOs against police officers present in
the arrests as well as KEELPNO doctors for sharing test results with
the police and violating patient confidentiality.
Calls
to take back the measure came from abroad almost immediately after
the reinstatement was announced. In her closing speech at the annual
convention of the International Aids Society in Kuala Lumpur on
Wednesday, French Nobelist Françoise
Barré-Sinoussi,
the scientist accredited with co-discovering the HIV virus, expressed
her “strong
disappointment.”
“As
President of the IAS I strongly condemn this move and urge the Greek
Government to rethink its position. HIV infections are already
increasing in Greece due to the economic crisis and a mandatory
policy of detainment and testing will only fuel the epidemic there.”
Barré-Sinoussi
added: “As we
keep repeating over the years, there will be no end to the HIV
epidemic without advancing Human rights in parallel.”
Sinoussi’s
concerns were echoed in a damning announcement by Human Rights Watch,
which called the reinstatement “a big step backward for human
rights and public health.“
“Addressing
infectious diseases such as HIV, hepatitis, and tuberculosis requires
investing in health services, not calling the police. If the
government is serious about addressing HIV and other infectious
diseases, it should focus on access to health care and public
information,” wrote HRW in a statement earlier this week. “Any
detention for public health reasons must have a lawful basis, be
demonstrably necessary and proportionate, and be nondiscriminatory.
Anyone detained, irrespective of the grounds, is entitled to
guarantees of due process.”
On their part, local Greek NGOs and human rights initiatives saw the reinstatement as a betrayal of their year-long battle for its repeal. HIV NGOs and LGBT and human rights initiatives chided the new leadership in a joint statement, for ignoring the unanimous decision that prompted its repeal as well as the recent report by the Greek Ombudsman citing the provision’s unconstitutionality.
“We cannot allow the implementation of practices that lead our society to the Middle Ages,” the statement by Positive Voice, Center for Life and Praksis, among other groups, said. “Access to free and public health services, access to medical coverage and a respect for human rights are non-negotiable for us. Since the leadership of the Health Ministry obviously does not share this view, we have a responsibility to make it clear with our actions.”
On their part, local Greek NGOs and human rights initiatives saw the reinstatement as a betrayal of their year-long battle for its repeal. HIV NGOs and LGBT and human rights initiatives chided the new leadership in a joint statement, for ignoring the unanimous decision that prompted its repeal as well as the recent report by the Greek Ombudsman citing the provision’s unconstitutionality.
“We cannot allow the implementation of practices that lead our society to the Middle Ages,” the statement by Positive Voice, Center for Life and Praksis, among other groups, said. “Access to free and public health services, access to medical coverage and a respect for human rights are non-negotiable for us. Since the leadership of the Health Ministry obviously does not share this view, we have a responsibility to make it clear with our actions.”
Protests
against the reinstatement of 39A are continuing with a gathering
outside the Ministry of Health in Athens tomorrow.
A
new documentary produced by radiobubble about the 2012 arrests called “Ruins: Chronicle of
an HIV witch-hunt,” is due for release this September. It features
interviews by women who were arrested and their families. You can
watch a trailer here:
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