Pubdate: Mon, 12 Jul 2004
Source: Nation, The (Thailand)
Copyright: 2004 Nation Multimedia Group
Contact:  http://www.nationmultimedia.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1963

INTL AIDS CONFERENCE: PM HECKLED AT OPENING

Thaksin Accused Of Being A Liar While Pledging Equal Medical Access For All

Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's controversial war on drugs, in which 
more than 2,500 people were killed, came back to haunt him yesterday on his 
biggest international stage yet.

Opening the 15th International Aids Conference at the Impact Arena attended 
by thousands of delegates, Thaksin's pledges to give equal medical access 
to all poor Thais living with the disease were soured when sections of the 
audience heckled him and unfurled a banner saying "Thaksin lies".

To add to the host's embarrassment, the last speaker of the opening 
ceremony, Paisan Suwannawong, head of the Thai Drug Users Network and 
chairman of the Thai Treatment Action Group, slammed the government for the 
lack of harm-reduction intervention to protect intravenous drug users from 
HIV/Aids.

Paisan said drug users were seen as criminals and faced stigmatisation and 
discrimination in society and in healthcare settings, as well as police 
harassment. Tears running down his face, Paisan recalled difficult times 
during the country's war on drugs in which over 2,500 were killed, a 
campaign that drove many drug users underground.

Paisan demanded more clean needles and the legalisation of methadone. "We 
need these means of prevention put in place now. And we need access to 
treatment now," he said, amid cheering and applause from the Aids activists.

His heart-felt statements and catcalls and whistles from activists during 
Thaksin's speech highlighted accusations of intolerance towards intravenous 
drug users, charges that Thaksin tried to counter yesterday in his opening 
speech.

"In the past, drug use was treated like a crime which warranted severe 
punishment," Thaksin said. "At present, our mindsets have changed and we 
now see drug users as patients who require our support and treatment."

Along with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, Thaksin affirmed the pivotal 
role of people living with HIV/Aids, and called on the international 
community to do more to curb the spread of the deadly epidemic.

The inauguration was followed by a candle-lighting ceremony for the 
estimated 20 million people around the world who have died from 
Aids-related illnesses. The epidemic has reportedly infected another 40 
million people worldwide.

About 15,000 delegates and journalists from about 160 countries have 
converged on Bangkok for the weeklong conference.

The conference kicked off yesterday morning with conferences, seminars and 
noisy protests from various organisations claiming to speak on behalf of a 
wide range of people, from those infected with the deadly virus to poor 
farmers who are likely to be affected by free trade.

"Access for all! Access for all!" screamed a protest leader, whose chant 
was echoed by hundreds of demonstrators marching in front of the conference 
venue, which has brought together groups as disparate as sales reps from 
the world's leading pharmaceutical companies, the international media, 
politicians, sex-workers, religious leaders, children orphaned by the 
disease, and HIV patients insisting that they are "living with Aids", not 
dying from it.

One of the first organisations to hit the pavement yesterday was the Thai 
Drug Users Network, whose members handed out buttons that read "Stop the 
War on Drug Users" to everybody from delegates to police officers, who 
awkwardly thanked them for the gifts.

More than 2,500 suspected drug users were killed under questionable 
circumstances during the controversial three-month all-out war on drugs 
launched by the government last year. The campaign effectively drove 
intravenous drug users, who reportedly make up about 40 per cent of 
Thailand's Aids patients, underground.

Criticism from UN officials led to Thaksin's infamous "the UN is not my 
father" response.

When Thaksin insisted in his speech in the opening ceremony that his 
government no longer treated drug users as criminals but as patients, 
demonstrators and hecklers reminded him of the controversial campaign that 
was condemned by the international community, including the United Nations.

"Thai Government's Drug Policy = Drop Dead" read one sign that went up in 
the jammed-packed auditorium.

Meanwhile, about a dozen demonstrators took to the floor with placards 
reading "Thaksin Lies". They were escorted out of the auditorium moments later.

The weeklong conference brings together non-governmental organisations and 
charity groups from all over the world, as well as Hollywood actors 
including Richard Gere, Rupert Everett and Ashley Judd, and the singer 
Dionne Warwick.

A locally elected Miss Condom will have the home-turf advantage against 
Miss Universe, 20-year-old Australian surfer Jennifer Hawkins, whose busy 
schedule over the past three days has given her a head-start in the media 
spotlight stakes.

Other famous and powerful figures to join this week's meeting include 
India's Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi, Ugandan President Yoweri 
Museveni, South African statesman Nelson Mandela and his wife, Graca 
Machel, who is one of the world's leading figures in the fight against 
HIV/Aids.

Machel will be chairing a discussion on the social impact of the deadly 
epidemic in southern Africa.

In line with other major international events, the Thai government has gone 
the extra mile in trying to show the world that it really cares.

Young ladies are handing out condoms with ego-enhancing sizes (big and 
bigger) at the Bangkok International Airport arrivals lounge and highway 
tollbooths.

Phermsak Lilakul, Don Pathan
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart