Pubdate: Tue, 22 May 2007 Source: New Straits Times (Malaysia) Copyright: 2007 NST Online Contact: http://www.nst.com.my/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3734 GETTING REAL WITH AIDS MORAL dilemmas are hard to grapple with when they arise as a consequence of a scourge as deadly as AIDS. Consider the qualified success of the needle and syringe exchange programme introduced last year as a means of cutting down the incidence of HIV/AIDS infections spreading through the contaminated paraphernalia of drug abuse. This was an instance of "realism" taking precedence over the morally repugnant notion of helping drug addicts remain addicts, only with cleaner equipment, which too many of them took only to exchange among themselves as before. Now comes the question of condoms: To promote, or not to promote? A quarter-century after AIDS raised its ugly head, the facts are incontrovertible: The single most effective measure against infection, other than sexual abstinence or congress only within a proper monogamous relationship, is condom use. Yet, many countries, other than ours, have wrestled with the dilemma of whether or not to encourage prophylactic use among young people by, say, installing condom vending machines in school or college lavatories. While national administrations dithered in hand-wringing anguish, infection rates inexorably climbed. Today, some 2.3 million children under 15 are infected with HIV worldwide, with more than half-a-million infected last year alone. In this country, 38 per cent of the more than 73,000 HIV cases are between the ages of 13 and 29. Children under 15 and young people between 15 and 24 account for half of all new HIV infections, and the mother-to-child transmission rate rose from 0.2 per cent in 1991 to 1.2 per cent in 2005. Yet, too many newly infected people ruefully admit to having had the mistaken notion that HIV was a risk faced only by intravenous drug users, sex workers and the promiscuous. Still, the government is loath to openly sanction condom use among youth, in view of the thin ice it would have to tread on religious sensibilities and cultural sensitivities. This is understandable. But why should governments be expected to take charge of everything to do with life and death in any given nation? Here in Malaysia, such NGOs as the Malaysian AIDS Council (MAC) have done sterling work in expanding awareness and disseminating information and assistance to HIV/AIDS sufferers and their families, while actively pursuing preventive strategies especially among the young. Let the MAC and other concerned organisations shoulder the task of promoting condom use, freeing the higher national authorities to uphold the ideals of clean and moral living, while social activism takes on the hard realities of modern life. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman