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Showing posts with label thailand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thailand. Show all posts

Jul 15, 2008

Call For Candidates From the Asian Pacific Region to participate in IHRA's Executive Program Committee for the 2009 IHRC in Thailand

DU-Activists at Beyond2008


Antwerp, July 15, 2008

Dear Friends, Fellow Drug User Activists,


I received a request from IHRA's Executive Director Gerry Stimson to propose 2 INPUD Activists from the Asian Pacific region to join the Executive Program Committee (EPC) of the 2009 International Harm Reduction Conference in Thailand.


The composition and tasks of the EPC as explained on IHRA's website:


Executive Program Committee - International Harm Reduction Association

The Executive Program Committee (EPC) is a professional body composed of distinguished professionals from the harm reduction field. Their role is to create the conference program by organizing sessions themselves or by creating sessions out of the abstracts that have been submitted on line.

The EPC members come from around the world and from numerous professional backgrounds (including large multi-lateral organizations, harm reduction networks, research institutes and organizations for people who use drugs). Their knowledge, experience and skills guarantee that the conference program is of the highest quality.



Call for candidates


I call for DU-Activists from the Asian Pacific region to be candidate for IHRA's 2009 EPC.


DU-Activists can apply by sending an email to Stijn@inpud.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

The email should contain:


  • your contact details,

  • a CV of your work in DU-activism and Harm Reduction

  • and a paragraph explaining your motivation to apply for being on the EPC.


Applications should be send to me before Sunday July 20 midnight CET (European Time).


INPUD Board members will evaluate the applications and propose 2 DU-Activists to IHRA the latest on Tuesday July 22.


Thanks for being active,


Stijn Goossens

International Network Of People Who Use Drugs


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Apr 24, 2008

Thailand: PRIME MINISTER GIVES POLICE LICENSE TO KILL (for immediate release)

Thailand's war on drugs will undermine national AIDS fight and human rights
Thursday, April 24: Demonstrations planned for international UNAIDS meeting in Chiang Mai, Thailand and New York City

PRIME MINISTER GIVES POLICE LICENSE TO KILL


Contact: Paisan Suwannawong (Thai and English)
+66-81-824-5434 (in Thailand, 081-824-5434

Jennifer Flynn, Health GAP (English) +1.917.517.5202
Anan Muanmoonchai (Thai only) 081-025-6570


(Bangkok) Global civil society has reacted with alarm and outrage at the Thai government’s revival of a war on drugs. The country’s last effort to eradicate drugs, implemented in 2003 under former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, included extra-judicial killings, 'blacklisting' of suspected drug users and dealers, and forced drug 'treatment' in military-style facilities. The result was nearly 3,000 people were murdered, 1,400 had no connection to drugs. The government has failed to identify or punish any of the perpetrators of these crimes. The campaign caused irrevocable damage to people’s reputation, property and lives.

“The 2003 war on drugs is notorious for the crimes against humanity perpetrated by Thai authorities,” said Karyn Kaplan, Director of Policy and Development for Thai AIDS Treatment Action Group (TTAG). “We are horrified that Thailand would re-launch such a disastrous government policy.” In addition to gross human rights violations, the 2003 drug war seriously disrupted drug users’ access to essential services, such as HIV treatment, prevention information, counseling and equipment, by driving drug users even further underground.


Activists in Thailand and other countries have planned a protest against Thailand's drug war during the Chiang Mai meeting of the Programme Coordinating Board (PCB) of UNAIDS. Thailand, whose representative is currently the UNAIDS Board Chair, will host the meeting from April 23rd-25th. Rallies are planned outside the Thai Embassy in New York simultaneous with the Thai activist demonstration in front of the UNAIDS PCB meeting venue in Chiang Mai, Thailand on April 23, 12:30 a.m. EST. Solidarity actions will be held in other cities around the world in early May.

Thai AIDS activists want to highlight the important role that UNAIDS can play in advocating to governments to provide lifesaving prevention and targeted treatment services to highly vulnerable groups, including migrant workers, undocumented citizens and people who use drugs. Without addressing the specific needs and challenges faced by these groups, the goal of universal access cannot be achieved.


"The Thai war on drugs will have disastrous consequences for the fight against AIDS in Thailand--and it will not work as a response to drug use in Thai society," said Kriengkrai Aiemprasert, outreach worker at Ban Mit Sampan Harm Reduction Center in Bangkok. "The Thai Prime Minister should end the war on drugs, and promote a response to drug use based on evidence, and human rights."


An estimated 50% of drug users in Thailand are HIV-positive. HIV incidence and prevalence in Thailand has declined overall, but not among people who use drugs or other highly vulnerable groups including men who have sex with men (MSM). Experts attribute this to the Thai government’s resistance to comprehensive harm reduction policy and programming, along with their reluctance to include drug users in the design and implementation of treatment and prevention programs. "Fighting HIV in Thailand requires evidence-based interventions for people who use drugs," said Paisan Suwannawong, director of the Thai AIDS Treatment Action Group (TTAG) and a former intravenous drug user. "We urgently need an effective response – instead the government has pledged to crack down on drugs and told us that we should expect more murders. The Prime Minister, Samak Sundaravej himself said killings are ‘impossible to avoid’ in a drug war. This kind of message is unacceptable and , essentially, a license to kill.”


We demand that the Thai government immediately denounce this policy and commit to implementing effective harm reduction policies and improving humane drug treatment. “While the government has said that they will respect human rights, they have proven that they can not be trusted without creating a detailed plan of exactly how they will protect drug users.” said Amanda Lugg, Health GAP Board Member.

RALLY IN CHIANGMAI, THAILAND, April 23rd, 2008, HOLIDAY INN, 318 Chiangmai-Lumphun Road, T.Wat Kate, Au. Muang, Chiangmai 5000 12:30 p.m. local time. Opening day of UNAIDS PCB meeting.




Dec 1, 2007

Thailand: Denial of HIV Treatment Erodes Success on AIDS



Drug Users Driven Away From Effective HIV Programs


http://hrw.org/reports/2007/thailand1107/

(Bangkok, November 29, 2007) - Thailand's failure to address the HIV epidemic
in the hardest-hit population, drug users, is jeopardizing its record as a leader in
the global fight against AIDS, Human Rights Watch and the Thai AIDS Treatment
Action Group said today in a report <http://hrw.org/reports/2007/thailand1107/>
released in advance of World AIDS Day.

In violation of its constitutional and international human rights obligations, the Thai
government has systematically failed to prevent and treat HIV infection among
drug users. The Thai government estimates that 40 to 50 percent of injection drug
users are living with HIV in Thailand - virtually unchanged over the past two
decades.

The 57-page report, "Deadly Denial: Barriers to HIV/AIDS Treatment for People
Who Use Drugs in Thailand" <http://hrw.org/reports/2007/thailand1107/> ,
found that routine police harassment and arrest - as well as the lasting effects of
former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's 2003 drug war - keeps drug users
from receiving lifesaving HIV information and services that Thailand has
pledged to provide. The report also documents how drug users face
discrimination from health care workers, who continue to deny antiretroviral
treatment to people who need it based on their status as drug users.

"Thailand wants to be seen as a success story in the fight against AIDS, yet it is
failing to address the epidemic among the population hit hardest by HIV," said
Rebecca Schleifer, advocate advocate with the HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
Program at Human Rights Watch. "The Thai government has recognized that the
HIV infection rate is 'unacceptably high,' and it has the expertise to address this
public health emergency."

Thailand has been lauded as a global leader among developing countries for
its aggressive HIV prevention programs and its efforts to provide universal
access to HIV treatment. Yet Thailand never reached out with prevention
programs to injection drug users.

In 2003 the government of former Prime Minister Thaksin launched a
repressive "war on drugs" that resulted in the extrajudicial killings of at least
2,275 drug users or dealers. A lasting consequence of this campaign has been
to drive many drug users away from effective HIV/AIDS prevention and
treatment, out of fear of arrest and police violence.

In response to drug users' advocacy, the Thai government has taken some
steps to reduce some of the barriers for drug users to HIV services. In 2004,
Thailand rescinded a national policy that explicitly permitted the exclusion of
injection drug users from antiretroviral treatment programs.

But drug users still face serious obstacles in accessing needed health care.
Many health care providers do not know or do not follow HIV/AIDS treatment
guidelines, and continue to deny antiretroviral treatment to drug users, even
those in methadone treatment programs.

"An HIV diagnosis is still a death sentence for most drug users in Thailand," said
Paisan Suwannawong, director of the Thai AIDS Treatment Action
Group. "Thailand must stop discrimination against drug users seeking health
care services, or it will never meet its promise to ensure access to AIDS
treatment to all who need it."

Out of fear of reprisal, drug users who do receive antiretroviral treatment are
unlikely to tell their physicians about their drug use, or to seek information about
drug dependence treatment from their antiretroviral treatment provider. This fear
is not unfounded: the report confirms that many public hospitals and clinics share
information about drug use with law enforcement, both as a matter of policy and
practice. Some clinicians operated a "don't ask, don't tell" policy toward drug
users, refusing to inquire about patients' drug use or drug treatment history, in
some cases despite knowledge or suspicion of current drug use or methadone
treatment.

The government's failure to ensure conditions in which safe exchange of
information is possible compromises drug users' access to adequate HIV and
other health care services. As a result, drug users face harmful drug interactions
without health care workers to consult about the dangerous potential
consequences for their health and, ultimately, their lives.

The Thai authorities have provided minimal support for harm-reduction services
for drug users, notwithstanding their proven effectiveness. These limited harm-
reduction programs are seriously undermined by the government's ongoing,
repressive anti-drug campaigns. Police regularly interfere with drug users' efforts
to seek health care by harassing clients outside of drug treatment centers. Police
also use possession of sterile syringes, or presence at a methadone clinic, as a
basis for drug-related criminal charges.

"The Thai government pays lip service to its official policy, which is to treat drug
users as patients rather than criminals," said Suwannawong. "In reality, police
collect information about drug users from health clinics, and arrest peer outreach
workers outside drug treatment clinics. Drug users risk criminal charges if they
seek health care services which are theirs by right."

The report also found that incarcerated drug users have an even harder time
obtaining needed HIV prevention, care and treatment services. Antiretroviral
therapy is available only on an extremely limited basis to prisoners. Many Thai
drug users spend time in pre-trial detention or prison, often cycling in and out of
government detention facilities. The government has also failed to take
measures to ensure that fundamental services (antiretroviral treatment and other
HIV-related medical care, harm reduction, drug-dependence treatment, and
psychosocial services) are coordinated in the general community, or with
services provided on entry to or exit from prison.

Thailand's new National AIDS Plan - launched in 2007 under the current military
government of Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont - recognizes the authorities'
failures in combating HIV and AIDS among drug users and prisoners, and
proposes to scale up efforts to ensure their access to HIV and AIDS prevention,
care, and treatment services. This commitment follows a number of other similar
public undertakings that have remained unfulfilled, however.

"Thailand needs to translate its written commitments on HIV/AIDS into action,"
said Schleifer. "If the authorities don't immediately address the systematic
human rights violations committed against drug users by police and health care
providers, the government will be contributing directly to the continued spread of
HIV."

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