Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jun 2007 Source: Daily Times (Pakistan) Copyright: 2007 Daily Times Contact: http://www.dailytimes.com.pk Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2893 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) 'HIV RATES ON THE RISE IN IRAN' TEHRAN: HIV infection rates in Iran are increasing rapidly due both to a growing inflow of cheap heroin from Afghanistan and more sexually transmitted cases, according to a senior United Nations official. Christian Salazar, the world body's coordinator on HIV in Iran, praised the country's "progressive and pragmatic" efforts in fighting the virus that causes AIDS, including a programme to hand out clean needles to drug addicts in prisons. But he said the Islamic Republic now faced new challenges to contain a disease that risked becoming more common among other sections of its 70 million population. "Basically all the indicators for a quick advancement of the virus are there," he told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday. "We are worried about the trend." With Iran straddling a key heroin smuggling route from the opium fields of neighbouring Afghanistan to the West, injecting drug users remained the main risk group, but sexual transmission was also on the rise. Salazar, who heads the UN children's fund UNICEF in Iran, said there was a need to raise general awareness among the public at large, even if it can be a sensitive issue in a country which bans sex outside marriage. "We see more and more sexual transmission as a driver of the epidemic," he said. "It creates the problem, so to speak, of how to talk about sex without talking about sex." Aiming to make AIDS "everybody's business," he said UNICEF increasingly sought to approach influential religious leaders. "They are okay with this," he said. "In comparison maybe to other religions, for example condom use or family planning is not a taboo issue." Iran 'a leader': Iran is currently a low-prevalence country in terms of HIV infections, with a rate of about 0.16 pct of the adult population, below levels seen in other parts of the world. For example, it was 0.8 percent in North America in 2006. "But the infection rates are skyrocketing," Salazar said. "In the worst of cases we are moving towards one percent or even 1.8-1.9 percent of the population." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman