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Crowd burns down sex workers homes in Sitamari, Bihar
Dear All,
You must be already aware about the gruesome, inhuman incident happened in the Sitamari of the Muzaffar district of Bihar, on 15th of April where armed hooligans torched down a sex work site and it was shocking to know that the police & the local administration were awfully found to take the back seat of mere spectators just to watch the barbaric act.
The brutal act has not only rendered around 250 sex workers and their families homeless, but some are found to have succumbed to death by this inhuman destruction spree. Three children of sex workers were reported to have died and many injured by this nefarious act. The bodies of the deceased were even reported to lie unattained. The police instead of nabbing the perpetrators allegedly arrested some of the sex workers and detained them in custody.
We at DMSC strongly oppose to this barbaric act and press for an immediate enquiry at every possible level starting from Human Rights Commission, National Commission for Women, to find the fact and to bring the culprits to the book. A 15 member squad comprising of sex workers and program officers have already been sent to Bihar to render required assistance to the helpless sex workers of Sitamari and to reinforce the advocacy with the local administration to bring justice to the sex workers . The team already met with the Superntendent of Police and today they are supposed to meet with the CM of Bihar.
We are also going to organize a Protest Rally in Kolkata tomorrow, 23.04.08 at 5.00PM to mark a strong protest against this heinous incident and will call for a nationwide campaign to force the administration of Bihar to take appropriate legal actions against the miscreants found guilty.
We also urge you to all to raise your voice against these state-sponsored atrocities perpetrated on the innocent sex workers of Sitamari.
In solidarity,
Abstinence 1, S-Chip 0
DEMOCRATIC leaders are right to contest President Bush’s veto of their bill to expand the State Children’s Health Insurance program. But sadly, their “bipartisan compromise” will leave millions of young Americans vulnerable to sickness and suffering of the most preventable kind.
To entice Republicans to support the bill, the House of Representatives agreed to increase money for abstinence-only sex education by $28 million, to a total of about $200 million a year. Abstinence-only courses, the only form of federally financed sex ed, teach that sexual activity outside of marriage is likely to cause psychological and physical harm.
If that were true, our health care system would be not only broken, but besieged. A 2002 survey found that 93 percent of American adults had had premarital sex by the age of 30.
In addition to provoking shame about a nearly universal activity, abstinence-only sex education is ineffective and dangerous. Last April, a 10-year study found that students who took abstinence-only courses were no more likely to abstain from sex than other students. Previous studies revealed that abstinence-only students avoid using contraception.
Programs in public schools teach patently false information like “the chances of getting pregnant with a condom are one out of six” and H.I.V. “may be in your body for a long time (from a few months to as long as 10 years or more) before it can be detected.”
The results are tragic. The United States has the highest teenage pregnancy rate in the developed world (about the same as Ukraine’s), and the highest abortion rate in the Western world. Sexually transmitted infections like syphilis and gonorrhea are on the rise for the first time since the 1980s, and chlamydia is being diagnosed twice as often as it was a decade ago.
Among Americans living in poverty — those who might see the $4 price of a three-pack of condoms as the take-home pay for an hour of work at minimum wage — the unintended pregnancy rate has increased 30 percent since 1994.
Our teenage pregnancy and abortion rates have declined during the last decade, but research suggests this is mainly because of increased use of condoms, something young people must learn about outside of school.
By dropping the financing for abstinence-only sex ed, Congress could save enough money to insure 150,000 children a year. And it would also demonstrate much needed resolve to protect all aspects of children’s health.
A Castro Strives to Open Cuban’s Opinions on Sex
TWENTY or so transsexuals sat in a circle recently discussing their woes: harassment, boyfriend troubles, the challenge of removing hair from their legs. Empathizing with them was Mariela Castro Espín, Cuba’s premier sexologist.
“I know, I know,” she said, putting her hand on one of her own legs to show she could relate.
Then the conversation took an interesting turn. The transsexuals, who are receiving training as AIDS counselors at the National Center for Sexual Education, which Ms. Castro directs, brought up sexual liaisons some of them had had with soldiers. Maybe counseling in the barracks was needed, the transsexuals said.
Ms. Castro smiled, raised her eyebrows but did not dismiss the suggestion out of hand. Homosexuality is illegal in Cuba’s military. In fact, some Cubans have avoided military service altogether by claiming to be gay.
Making the proposal even more delicate, everyone in the circle knows, is the fact that Ms. Castro, 44, is the daughter of Raúl Castro, the commander of Cuba’s armed forces and, with the recent health problems of his brother, Fidel, the temporary leader of the government.
Despite Ms. Castro’s pedigree in Cuba’s most famous family, however, no one seems to hold his — or her — tongue around her. While her father is known for his strait-laced bearing, Ms. Castro has a more down-to-earth air. A mother of three who is married to an Italian photographer, she speaks of topics that might make others blush.
“Sexuality does not just have a reproductive function,” she declared in an interview on the front porch of a Havana mansion, where the center is located, noting that sex is also about love and pleasure and discovery and experiment. “Human beings are much more diverse than we think.”
CUBA, like many islands around the Caribbean, is a sexually liberal place where relationships out of wedlock are commonplace and taboos seem to be few, but only within heterosexual relationships. Homosexuality, transvestitism and transsexuality, however, are another matter.
Historically, Cuba’s gays have experienced the wrath of the government, with many sent off to labor camps. The climate has greatly improved in recent years, most seem to agree. Still, transvestites and transsexuals continue to complain of police harassment, and those with AIDS remain stigmatized, making prevention programs a challenge.
“I suggest you take a stroll on La Rampa to see how freely people express their sexual orientation,” Ms. Castro said, mentioning a popular gathering spot for gays in Havana. “This doesn’t mean we don’t have to work in the political arena and in the education of all of society.”
Ms. Castro said she felt no pressure to enter the family business of politics. She studied psychology in college, she said, and is now on the forefront of Cuba’s effort to make sex, in all its variety, as natural a discussion topic as it is a physical act. Her center helped produce a soap opera on state television last year featuring a married man who discovered he was attracted to other men. It was hugely popular.
Ms. Castro, who is writing her Ph.D. dissertation on transvestitism, is also pushing for an overhaul of Cuban laws so that, among other things, the government health care system covers surgery for transsexuals and that new official identification documents are issued after the operation.
Already, a government panel reviews individual cases of those wishing to change their sex and refers some transsexuals to therapy and hormone treatment. Currently, 26 transsexuals have been approved for treatment by the committee, with another 50 under review, Ms. Castro said.
She recalled several years ago her discomfort when some transvestites and transsexuals first approached her at the center to raise their difficulties with the authorities. “At the beginning, I didn’t understand them,” she said.
But the more she listened, the more she began to believe that Cuba’s Communist state, in which she is a committed believer, ought to accept transvestites and transsexuals as comrades along with everyone else.
NO sex-related topic is off limits in the center’s publication, Sexology and Society, which features artwork and poetry with sexual themes and academic articles dealing with subjects like gay bashing, domestic violence and hormone therapy for transsexuals.
Her magazine publishes research from scientists around the world regardless of their nations’ relations with Cuba. That means American sex research sometimes finds its way onto the pages of Sexology and Society.
Ms. Castro attended a sexology conference in California several years ago, which was her only trip to the United States. A return trip seems unlikely any time soon, though, she said with a smile and a shrug, since she cannot get a visa.
Ms. Castro, who has two sisters and a brother, insists her family name “doesn’t help me at all.” To the contrary, she said, when she has tried to work with the Cuban military, commanders were so concerned about nepotism that they were uncooperative.
But Ms. Castro acknowledges that she has access to the very top of Cuba’s bureaucracy, which certainly does not hurt in pressing her agenda.
She said she puts a copy of her center’s magazine on her father’s bedside table and briefs him on her work whenever she can. “He has told me he supports me, that he supports the personal rights of homosexuals,” she said of her father, who is 75 and spent his life as a military man. “He always says go slowly, though, so you don’t build walls.”
Making the case to her uncle, Fidel, has been even more of a challenge. He is known for firing back questions at those briefing him and expecting knowledgeable answers. “I was terrified he would ask me something I didn’t know,” she said.
Now she gives him informal briefings whenever she can. He is a busy man, though, she said, so getting an audience is not easy.
Ms. Castro views her work as a continuation of that of her mother, Vilma Espín, who has been the head of the Cuban Women’s Federation for nearly half a century. The sexual education center, like just nearly every other group in Cuba, is part of the government bureaucracy. But Ms. Castro said she participated in politics as an everyday citizen, not as the niece of El Commandante, whom she recently described as being in “stupendous” condition.
Despite her government’s restrictions on political speech, Ms. Castro is an outspoken advocate for more open sexual discourse. The more young people learn about sexuality, she contends, the less they will pick up from the streets. And politicians, too, need to be briefed on the topic, she said, to lead to more enlightened public policy.
“If you suppress things, they will become hidden,” she said. “It has been proven in scientific research in Cuba and other countries that the more education you give adolescents and adults, the more people are free to make their own decisions.”
Positive Trends Recorded in U.S. Data on Teenagers
WASHINGTON, July 12 (AP) — Fewer high school students were having sex and more were using condoms in 2005, according to the latest government report on the well-being of the nation’s children.
The teenage birthrate hit a record low.
More young people were finishing high school, and more tots were being read to.
It is good news on a number of crucial indicators of health, experts said about the report. It is scheduled to be released Friday by the Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics, a consortium of federal agencies that includes the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the Census Bureau and the Administration for Children and Families.
“The implications for the population are quite positive in terms of their health and their well-being,” said Edward J. Sondik, director of the National Center for Health Statistics. “The lower figure on teens having sex means the risk of sexually transmitted diseases is lower.”
In 2005, 47 percent of high school students — 6.7 million — reported having had sexual intercourse, down from 54 percent in 1991. The rate of those who reported having had sex had remained the same since 2003.
Of those who reported having had sex during a three-month period in 2005, 63 percent — about 9 million — said they used condoms. That is an increase from the 46 percent reported in 1991.
The teenage birth rate in 2005, the report said, was 21 per 1,000 young women ages 15 to 17 — an all-time low. The rate in 1991 was 39 births per 1,000 teenagers.
“This is very good news,” Mr. Sondik said. “Young teen mothers and their babies are at a greater risk of both immediate and long-term difficulties.”
Education campaigns that started years ago have been having a significant effect, said James Wagoner, president of Advocates for Youth, a nonprofit group based in Washington that focuses on the prevention of teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.
“I think the H.I.V./AIDS epidemic and the efforts in the ’80s and ’90s had a lot to do with that,” Mr. Wagoner said of the improved numbers on teenage sexual activity, condom use and births.
“We need to encourage young teens to delay sexual initiation, and we need to make sure they get all the information they need about condoms and birth control,” he said.
Other major points of the report include the following:
- The percentage of children covered by health insurance decreased slightly. In 2005, 89 percent of children had health insurance coverage at some point during the year, compared with 90 percent the previous year.
- More youngsters were being read to. Sixty percent of children ages 3 to 5, and not in kindergarten, were read to daily by a family member in 2005, an increase from 53 percent in 1993.
- The percentage of children who had at least one parent working year round and full time increased to 78.3 percent in 2005 from 77.6 percent in the previous year.
- More young people were completing high school. In 2005, 88 percent of young adults had finished high school compared with 84 percent in 1980.
- The report was compiled from statistics and studies at 22 federal agencies, and covered 38 indicators, including infant mortality, academic achievement rates and the number of children living in poverty.
Grim Outlook for an AIDS Vaccine
Back in 1984, federal health officials, flush with excitement over discovery of the virus that causes AIDS, famously predicted that they would have a vaccine ready for market within three years. Now, after almost a quarter-century of toil and struggle, the effort has crashed in failure. No one yet knows whether a vaccine to prevent the disease will ever be possible.
David Baltimore, a Nobel-winning biologist, sounded a note of despair in an address to the American Association for the Advancement of Science in February. He noted that the virus has evolved in a way that makes it virtually impossible to attack by priming the immune system, the usual goal of a vaccine. Repeated efforts have failed, he said, leaving “no hopeful route to success.” The best hope, he said, may lie in the biological equivalent of a “Hail Mary” pass — a wholly new approach that would combine gene therapy, stem cells and immunologic therapy to thwart the disease.
At a conference at the National Institutes of Health last Tuesday, AIDS experts assessed how to proceed after the failure of the most promising vaccine candidate in two large clinical trials last year. Early results showed that those who received the vaccine may actually have been more likely to become infected with the virus than those who did not.
At least one organization that treats AIDS patients has called for giving up on a vaccine and shifting the money to testing, treatment and prevention. That is too defeatist. Federal health officials are rightly determined to increase financing for basic laboratory research, curtail big clinical trials of existing vaccine candidates, and funnel money to researchers with novel ideas. There is little doubt that a vaccine would be the most effective and cheapest way to shrink the AIDS epidemic.
YOUNG PEOPLE SPEAK OUT AGAINST SEX-ED BAN FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE HYDERABAD 31 OCTOBER 2007
As young people attending the 4th Asia Pacific Conference on Reproductive and Sexual Health and Rights, we strongly protest the ban against sex education recently imposed by 12 Indian State Governments.
The ban opposes the training tools used under Adolescent Education Programme developed by the Union Ministry of Education along with NACO and UNICEF.
This ban violates our right to information, right to education, right to health under the Indian Constitution and breaches India’s international commitments under UN treaties and declarations.
Young people need comprehensive sexuality education so that they are empowered to make informed decisions relating to their bodies without fear, shame or guilt. Given the right information and skills, young people can negotiate high-risk situations more effectively and reduce their vulnerability to violence, HIV and substance abuse.
Arguments based on culture or morality, such as those made by the Chief Minister of the State of Madhya Pradesh, are invalid and do not justify denying young people the information and skills they need and are entitled to.
Comprehensive sexuality education does not ‘corrupt young minds’ but that the lack of information leads young people to access false, incomplete and harmful information.
The Quiet Scandal of 10 Million Deaths
UNITED NATIONS, Oct 2 (IPS) – A global coalition of governments and
organisations has launched a new campaign to drastically improve pre- and
post-natal healthcare in places like India, which alone accounts for a
staggering 25 percent of the world’s child deaths and 20 percent of maternal deaths.
Called “Deliver Now” — a reference to the pledge made by 189 world leaders
meeting at the United Nations seven years ago to reduce child deaths by
two-thirds and maternal deaths by three-quarters by 2015, among other goals –
it brings together local government agencies, civil society, media and others to
allocate existing health resources more effectively.
Halfway toward the deadline to achieve the so-called Millennium Development
Goals, more than 10 million mothers and children still die every year, mostly
from preventable causes. Four million newborns die in their first four weeks of
their life, three million in the first week.
“The cause of women’s and children’s health has remained in the shadows for too
long and been neglected on the political agenda,” said Dr. Francisco Songane,
director of the partnership.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 42 percent of pregnant women
around the world experience a complication, of which 15 percent are
life-threatening. These problems mostly occur in developing countries: 95
percent of all maternal and newborn deaths worldwide occur in 75 countries in
Africa, Asia and Latin America.
According to recent research, at least 7 million of these deaths could be
prevented by expanding access to health systems.
These relatively simple measures include regular vaccinations, breastfeeding,
access to antibiotics and the help of a skilled birth attendant.
The first specific country programmes will start in 2008 in India and Tanzania,
which currently faces a critical shortage of qualified health workers to assist
during childbirth. Some 54 percent of women receive no skilled attendance; as a
result, a woman dies of pregnancy-related complications there every hour of
every day.
Besides Norway, France, Canada, Germany and Britain are also supporting the
campaign. More donor countries will become engaged.
Experts say that at least 9 billion dollars a year is needed to meet the basic
health care needs of women and children. As of 2004, only 2 billion dollars –
less than a quarter of what is needed — was available to support such services
in developing countries.
Good health also requires a sound environment and commitment to upholding
women’s fundamental rights.
[AIDS INDIA] More Young Women Infected With HIV In India
More Young Women Infected With HIV In India
Med Headlines – According to a statement released by the World Health
Organization (WHO), the number of young women infected with HIV in
India is twice as high as the rate of young men affected by the
virus. A WHO official released a statement in Hyderabad, and
expressed concern on growing “feminization” of the disease.
WHO took into account a study by the UNAIDS conducted in 2006.
Manjula Lusti-Narasimhan, who is the technical officer for Sexual and
Reproductive Health and HIV, WHO, revealed that 39% of the people
infected with HIV are young women between the ages of 15-24. The
number is almost double that of affected men in the same age group.
Narasimhan said, “The increasing feminization of HIV in India, among
the younger lot, is not a good sign.”
arly 2.5 million people in India are infected with HIV. Experts feel
that nothing significant has been done to address this issue.
As indicated by Lester Coutinho of the David and Lucile Packard
Foundation, India, “There is far too much of dialogue, too much of
lip service and tokenism. But when it comes to actually tackling the
problem, especially when it concerns the youth, nothing much has been
done.” Coutinho organized an HIV/AIDS awareness program in the tribal
areas of Bihar and Jharkhand for past eight years.
HIV ground for divorce: Court
NEW DELHI: Observing that marriage was “anathema” without sex, a local court has held that a person whose spouse is found to be HIV positive is justified in seeking a divorce.
Delivering the judgment, which is bound to kick up a controversy, additional district judge Rajnish Bhatnagar said that a person cannot live “happily” with a spouse who has AIDS or is HIV positive.
The judge thus granted divorce to a man whose wife is HIV positive, saying her ailment had prevented him from leading a “happy married life” as the disease is sexually communicable.
The court added that sex was an integral part of marriage and in this particular case, the husband was deprived of that enjoyment. “The HIV status of the wife no doubt resulted in non-enjoyment of sexual intercourse between the parties and marriage without sex is anathema,” the court said.
The couple from Kerala had married in October 2000 and moved to the capital. Five months after their marriage, the wife was found to be HIV positive in a medical test conducted during her pregnancy. Tests showed the husband hadn’t contracted the dreaded virus.
AIDS activists termed the decision to seek divorce as a matter of personal choice but expressed dismay over the negative impact the judgment would have on society’s perceptions of HIV positive people.
Said Dushyant Meher, AIDS programme coordinator of Salaam Balak Trust, “This is a conflict between the rights of an HIVpositive person and a healthy person. In this case, the court has given precedence to the rights of the healthy person.”
Februari 18, 2009