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Governments starting to realize that promoting condoms has left things worse, not better.
BY ANTO AKKARA
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
February 18-24, 2007 Issue |
Posted 2/13/07 at 9:00 AM
BANGALORE, India — The Indian
government says the Church is playing a crucial role in the fight against AIDS,
a disease that has assumed epidemic proportions on the subcontinent.
“The Church has taken up HIV/AIDS as
a very serious issue and we are very happy about the commitment of the Church
in this,” Mayank Aggarwal, joint director of the National AIDS Control
Organization, told the Register Jan. 29.
“Religious leaders hold mass support
in this country and we are working very closely with the Church in spreading
awareness on AIDS,” said Aggarwal.
Asked whether Catholic opposition to
condoms is a sticking point for the National AIDS Control Organization’s close
collaboration with the Church, Aggarwal replied: “I would not like to comment
on condoms and the Church. The Church has its own stand on condoms.
“But, I would say, we acknowledge
the great commitment and response of the Church in the fight against AIDS,” he
said.
India last year took over from South
Africa the dubious distinction of having the most number of HIV-positive people
in the world, with more than 5.6 million cases reported by UNAIDS. The Church
now runs the largest number of AIDS hospices by any faith-based or
non-governmental organization (NGO) in India. The Church in India runs at least
71 exclusive AIDS care and support centers for those discriminated and shunned
by society.
Aggarwal pointed out that the
National AIDS Control Organization follows the formula of ABC (Abstinence
before marriage, Be faithful to spouse and use of Condoms).
Though the Church may not agree with
it, the official pointed out that the government has the responsibility to
support condom usage to those who violate A and B as “it is duty bound to
protect all its citizens even if they behave in a deviant manner.”
While he reiterated the claim that
condoms remain “the only protection available” for indulging in sex outside
marriage, it was exactly this stance that came under sharp criticism when
Cardinal Wilfred Napier of Durban and president of the South African Bishops’
Conference, addressed Indian bishops in early January.
“The root cause of the wildfire
spread of AIDS is irresponsible moral behavior. By distributing condoms, this
[behavior] is not challenged but only encouraged,” Cardinal Napier said Jan. 6,
addressing the Jan. 4-9 assembly of the Conference of Catholic Bishops of
India, the Latin rite bishops meeting in the southern state of Kerala.
“By objecting to condoms, we are
promoting sexual discipline,” Cardinal Napier said. “Show us a country in
Sub-Saharan Africa that has reduced, let alone reversed, the rate of new
infections” with condoms.
The condom-centric approach South
Africa has followed for years has only pushed the country into the abyss in
which it finds itself now, Cardinal Napier said. More than 12% of the country’s
48 million people are HIV positive, and half of all deaths are from AIDS.
To prove his point, Cardinal Napier
said that Uganda is one of the greatest success stories in the fight against
AIDS, with its abstinence program bringing down the HIV infection rate from
more than 30% to below 6%.
“My country would not have come to a
tragic situation like this if those in power had listened to the Church,”
Cardinal Napier said in an interview.
Cautioning Indian bishops not to
pursue the South African model, Cardinal Napier said South Africa has now
hundreds of families headed by elder siblings, with neither parents nor
grandparents alive to look after the AIDS orphans. Two of his own priests are
looking after children of their brothers’ families — in one case six children,
in the other eight.
“Our message to the Indian Church
is: Please do not follow us,” added Cardinal Napier.
Bangalore Archbishop Bernard Moras,
chairman of the Healthcare Commission of the Catholic Bishops Conference of
India (comprising all three rites in India), told the Register, “We fully agree
with the concern raised by Cardinal Napier.”
By making condoms freely available on
street corners, in railway stations and at bus stops, Archbishop Moras lamented
that “the government is throwing morality to the winds. This will only repeat
the tragedy that has unfolded in South Africa.”
While it is mandatory for cigarette
manufacturers to print on cigarette packages the warning that smoking is
hazardous to people’s health, the government is publicly encouraging immoral
sexual behavior by propagating and distributing condoms, said Archbishop Moras.
Meanwhile, Father Sebastian
Ouseparambil, director of the Catholic Hospitals Association of India, said
that while the Church is in the forefront of providing care and support to HIV
victims, it is being victimized by the government and other donor agencies in
several Indian states.
“Many of them just bluntly reject
our projects [for support] because we do not distribute condoms,” Father
Ouseparambil told the Register Feb. 5. The Catholic Hospitals Association
comprises 3,400 Church-run hospitals and health care centers
“But, the reality is that even NGOs
have realized the value of our work and send their staff to attend AIDS
awareness programs we are holding,” said Father Ouseparambil.
Ten of the 60 health workers
attending an HIV care training program Feb. 6-12 at Catholic Hospitals
Association of India’s headquarters in Hyderabad, he said, were from non-Church
healthcare centers.
Anto Akkara writes from
Bangalore, India.
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