Although U.S. citizens "should be proud the United States is a
world leader in funding programs to fight the global plague of AIDS,
... they should be embarrassed
the United States is now requiring groups receiving those dollars to pledge
their opposition to prostitution and sex trafficking," a Des Moines
Register editorial says (Des
Moines Register 7/13). The Bush administration last month officially
notified U.S. organizations providing HIV/AIDS-related services in other countries
that they must sign a pledge opposing commercial sex work and sex trafficking
to be considered for federal funding. The policy stems from two 2003 laws,
including an amendment to legislation (HR
1298) authorizing the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief that prohibits funds from going to any group
or organization that does not have a policy "explicitly opposing prostitution
and sex trafficking" (Kaiser
Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 6/10). While the pledge "does nothing" to
curb the spread of HIV, it could alienate commercial sex workers, with whom
some of
the groups work, and jeopardize these women's "only source of health care," according
to the editorial. "Making a group sign a form promising to oppose certain
behaviors is manipulative at best," the editorial says, adding, "At
worst, it endangers lives" (Des Moines Register, 7/13).
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/print_report.cfm?DR_ID=31377&dr_cat=1