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International AIDS Society Calls for an End to Harassment, Intimidation and Imprisonment of HIV Professionals
252 Views Posted on 04-Sep-2010 under Health
Following the imprisonment of Maxim Popov in April 2010, sentenced to 7 years jail primarily for the promotion of HIV prevention efforts in
Uzbekistan, the International AIDS Society (IAS) has noted with alarm the detention of a medical practitioner working in HIV prevention in Ukraine.
Dr. Illya Podolyan, a 62-year old physician providing opioid substitution therapy (OST) for people using drugs, was detained on 28 May 2010 by
Odessa police and charged with alleged crimes relating to drugs trafficking. “This arrest is yet another example of committed professionals
being subjected to harassment, detention and even imprisonment as a consequence of implementing best practice HIV prevention and care,”
Professor Elly Katabira, President of the IAS stated. He said, Implementing evidence-based responses should never be a crime, and this arrest is
especially disturbing in a country such as Ukraine, which has in recent times seen the start of a turn around in its HIV epidemic due to improved
policies and the efforts of professionals such as Dr Podolyan. Substitution therapy is highly effective at reducing the spread of HIV in
epidemic’s such as Ukraine’s which are fueled primarily by injecting drug use. Substitution treatment programmes and the use of methadone
and buprenorphine, drugs prescribed by Dr. Podolyan for his patients, are legal in Ukraine and are included in the National Programme for HIV
Prevention, Treatment, Care and Support for 2009-2013, approved by law in February 2009. In practice, however, medical and other health personnel
involved in providing substitution therapy are subject to criminal prosecution, harassment and intimidation. Dr. Podolyan’s arrest is
unfortunately consistent with the systematic and widespread harassment of OST professionals and patients carried out by Ukrainian law enforcement
officers across the country. The IAS strongly urges the Ukrainian government to honour the guidelines of their National Programme for HIV
Prevention, Treatment, Care and Support, to ensure better protection for their HIV professionals and to urgently review the charges against Dr.
Podolyan. Suffering from a number of medical conditions including chronic heart disease, cardiac failures and chronic arthritis, Dr.
Podolyan’s health has deteriorated rapidly during his incarceration. As he poses no threat to public security while he awaits trial, the IAS
also appeals for his urgent release from custody. “Dr. Illya Podolyan’s detention, just before the XVIII International AIDS Conference
(AIDS 2010) in Vienna, is a sad testament to the serious human rights violations which continue to hamper HIV prevention and treatment efforts in
Eastern Europe,” said Dr. Katabira. He said that AIDS 2010 was held in Vienna to highlight the state of the epidemic in Eastern Europe and
Central Asia and to stress the need for a rational approach to drug policy in the region. While the attendance of over 1,200 participants from Eastern
Europe and Central Asia during the conference gives us real hope that policy makers are listening, the detention of Dr. Podolyan is a stark reminder
of how far the region still has to go. The Acting Executive Director of the IAS, Mats Ahnlund pointed out that Dr. Podolyan was unable to
receive the medical treatment he urgently required while he was in custody added that his imprisonment constitutes a violation to his individual human
right to health. Dr. Podolyan has been imprisoned for attempting to reverse his country’s growing HIV epidemic through providing services
which are not only scientifically proven to reduce the spread of HIV amongst drug users, but also included in the country’s national HIV
programme. The Ukrainian government should be doing everything it can to support these programmes and to acknowledge the critical role they play
in the national response to HIV, rather than allowing the persecution of those who implement them. I urge all influential political and public health
leaders to join IAS in calling on the Ukrainian government, and on all other governments who permit the harassment, vilification and unwarranted
imprisonment of HIV professionals, to ensure better protection for those working on the frontline of the HIV epidemic. (Story by David Amponsah
Boakye)
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