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Egypt: 117 NGO's slam HIV-based arrests and trials

Doctors helping police denounced for breaching medical ethics and human rights

As five more men face trial in Cairo on 9 April in a widening and dangerous police crackdown on people living with HIV/AIDS, 117 organisations worldwide working in the fields of health and human rights condemned the crackdown and the participation of medical personnel.

In a letter to the Health Ministry and the Egyptian Doctors’ Syndicate, the groups, led by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, said that doctors who helped interrogate men jailed on suspicion of being HIV-positive violated their own medical ethics, and their conduct led to a breach of trust in a privileged relationship.

Cairo police have jailed 12 men since October 2007 in a widening hunt for people suspected of being HIV-positive. The arrests began when one man, stopped on the street during an altercation, told officers he was HIV positive. Police arrested him and the man with him, beat and abused them, and began picking up others whose names or contact information they found through interrogating the first detainees.

All the men were charged with the “habitual practice of debauchery,” a term which in Egyptian law includes consensual sexual acts between men.

The Cairo-based Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights found a document from the Ministry of Health and Population titled “Questionnaire for Patients with HIV/AIDS” in one of the men’s case files. It includes “yes” or “no” questions that doctors from the ministry apparently use to interrogate people in the crackdown about whether they had sexual relations “with the other sex” or “with the same sex,” or “with one person” or “with more than one person.”

Prosecutors included the men’s answers that they had relations “with the same sex” as evidence of their guilt.

Doctors from the Ministry of Health also forced all the detainees to have HIV tests without their consent.

Meanwhile, doctors from Egypt’s Forensic Medical Authority enforced abusive anal examinations on the men to “prove” they had had sex with other men.

Several of the men have told lawyers that police and guards beat them in detention. A prosecutor informed one of them that he had tested positive for HIV by saying: “People like you should be burnt alive. You do not deserve to live.”

The prisoners who tested HIV-positive were held in hospitals, chained to their beds, for months. After a domestic and international outcry, the Ministry of Health finally ordered the men unchained on 25 February.

Malcolm Smart, director of the Middle East and North Africa programme of Amnesty International, said:

“It is unacceptable for doctors to perform forcible HIV tests, or to examine people to ‘prove’ offenses that should never be criminalised.

“Doctors who engage in or enable human rights abuses are violating their most elemental responsibilities.”

Joe Amon, director of the HIV/AIDS program at Human Rights Watch, said:

“Doctors must put patients first, not join a witch-hunt driven by prejudice.

“Now more than 100 human rights groups are reminding Egyptian doctors of the oath they took to respect patients’ privacy, autonomy, and consent. This is one of the oldest traditions of medical responsibility, as well as an obligation under human rights law.”

On 13 January 2008, a Cairo court convicted four of the men of “debauchery” charges and sentenced them to a year in prison. On February 2, their sentences were upheld on appeal.

On March 4, 2008, Cairo prosecutors handed down indictments against five more men, who will face charges of “habitual practice of debauchery” at their 9 April trial.

One of them faces an additional charge of facilitating the practice of debauchery for the other men. The charges were dropped for three other men.

Before issuing the latest indictment, the lead prosecutor told a lawyer for the defendants that the men should not be allowed to “roam the streets freely” because the government considered them “a danger to public health.”

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