Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jun 2006 Source: Moscow Times, The (Russia) Section: Issue 3429. Page 3 Copyright: 2006 The Moscow Times Contact: http://www.moscowtimes.ru/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/903 Author: Anastasiya Lebedev, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) AIDS OFFICIALS SKIRT HARDEST-HIT GROUPS The nation's chief epidemiologist and State Duma deputies pledged support Thursday for the war on AIDS but avoided discussing hard-hit groups such as prostitutes, drug users and homosexuals, in contrast with officials from other countries, including China and India. Their comments came at a conference featuring lawmakers from Germany, Britain, China, India and Brazil in advance of the G8 summit, where AIDS is expected to be prominently discussed. Chief epidemiologist Gennady Onishchenko and Tatyana Yakovleva, head of the Duma's Public Health Committee, warned the disease was spreading into the general public and stressed the need for vaccines and free treatment for those who were infected. Onishchenko added that HIV would be extensively discussed at the Group of Eight summit in St. Petersburg in July. Russia has 340,000 officially registered AIDS cases. International estimates put the figure at over 1 million. But unlike their counterparts from other countries who spoke of "injecting drug users" and "men having sex with men," Onishchenko and Yakovleva employed a more traditional vocabulary: They used the term "addicts" to describe drug users, and Onishchenko referred to sex between men as "the unnatural way." Yakovleva said that at least half of the approximately $100 million allocated in Russia for fighting AIDS this year would go toward prevention, including by raising awareness and providing testing. Asked about prevention among drug users, who account for the majority of new infections in Russia, she made it clear the government would not accommodate their habit. "We categorically oppose substitution therapy," Yakovleva said, referring to a program that has been popular in the West for decades that involves giving heroine users methadone. Substitution therapy is supported by officials from the UNAID program and the World Health Organization as an important tool in battling drug addiction and the spread of HIV. Lawmakers from other countries, by contrast, said needle-exchange and substitution-therapy programs were part of their anti-HIV efforts. They also discussed the need to provide treatment to people who took part in illegal activities such as drug use and prostitution. Despite reluctance to adopt more current tactics to battle the disease, Yakovleva did note that Russian regions would be able to decide on their own whether to fund needle-exchange programs with federal money. Russian AIDS activists at the Eastern European and Central Asian AIDS Conference held in Moscow in May repeatedly complained about the scarcity of such prevention programs for drug users. AIDS activist Mikhail Rukavishnikov criticized the government's opposition to substitution therapy, saying it was time to catch up with the rest of the world. One country that has embraced substitution therapy is China. Li Honggui, a Chinese lawmaker, said his government had made reaching out to high-risk groups a priority. Needle exchanges are also available in China, he said. Indian lawmakers said they were working on a bill that would prohibit discrimination against people with AIDS and make it easier for prostitutes, drug users and others involved in illegal activities to get health care. Arash Alaei, who works with people with AIDS and other diseases in Iran, said the conservative Islamic state's denial of the existence of drug use and prostitution in the country, coupled with stigmatization, led to high rates of suicide among those with HIV. He added that resistance to testing had contributed to the spread of the disease. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman