Documents on HIV/AIDS
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  • Press release
    Sep 23, 2009

    National governments, in cooperation with international agencies and donors, should reconsider deportation policies for people living with HIV/AIDS.

  • Commentary
    Jul 27, 2009

    To help establish the rule of law, the EU should support and fund a mechanism to try those most responsible for the crimes suffered by the Congolese people, such as a separate chamber on war crimes in Congo's courts, with the involvement of international judges and prosecutors.

  • Letter
    Feb 19, 2009

    Human Rights Watch writes to the Prime Minister of Jamaica urging him to publicly to condemn attacks - verbal or otherwise - on the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community, and to affirm that human rights in Jamaica cannot be restricted or infringed on the basis of anyone's sexual orientation or gender identity.

  • Press release
    Feb 5, 2009

    The new Kenyan National HIV/AIDS Strategic Plan should address rights abuses that make children vulnerable to HIV infection and impede access to care, Human Rights Watch said today in a policy proposal submitted to the government.

  • Testimony
    Feb 5, 2009

    Human Rights Watch welcomes the opportunity to provide input into the drafting of the next Kenya National HIV/AIDS Strategic Plan (KNASP), 2009/10-2013/14. This contribution concentrates on children’s rights, a policy area that we believe needs to be strengthened. Human Rights Watch has carried out research on HIV and children’s rights in Kenya since 2001, most recently on access to HIV treatment.

  • Press release
    Feb 4, 2009

    The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo should urgently carry out new recommendations from the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child to protect children from violence and abuse.

  • Commentary
    Dec 16, 2008

    Located in the region of the world that has been hit the hardest by the AIDS epidemic — southern and eastern Africa — Kenya made antiretroviral treatment for AIDS free of charge in 2006, and has been lauded for its prevention measures. Yet research that Human Rights Watch conducted there last year shows that the government is not doing nearly enough to treat HIV-positive children, the most vulnerable patients.

  • Press release
    Dec 16, 2008

    About 40,000 children in Kenya are likely to die in the next 24 months if they do not receive antiretroviral treatment (ART).

  • Letter
    Sep 14, 2008

    Human Rights Watch writes to commend Papua New Guinea on its recent accession to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). Accession is an important step towards guaranteeing respect for fundamental human rights in Papua New Guinea, and we welcome your government’s actions in this regard.

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