Singapore's gay sex prohibition slammed
November 21, 2004
A group that promotes AIDS awareness blasted a Singapore law that prohibits gay
sex, saying it impedes efforts to educate homosexuals about the dangers of HIV
transmission through unsafe sex.
Stuart Koe, head of the Fridae Asian gay and lesbian network, also rejected
recent criticism by Singapore's minister of state for health, Balaji Sadasivan,
who said the advocacy group Action for AIDS was "not doing enough" to fight the
spread of the disease.
"Since gay sex is illegal, how then can any agency or organization in Singapore
promote safe sex among men ... without being complicit in abetting illegal
activity?" a statement on Fridae's Web site said Sunday.
Singapore, a country of 4 million people, bans gay sex, defining it as "an act
of gross indecency" punishable by a maximum of two years in jail. There have
been few prosecutions, however.
Koe accused the government of neglecting the threat to gay men by failing to
target them in its AIDS awareness campaign.
"Singapore's public health service has systematically ignored and left (gay
men) out of all its public health messages," Koe said.
Health ministry officials said they could not respond immediately when
contacted Sunday.
Officials have said previously that the campaign against AIDS does not promote
condom use to fight the disease out of respect for Singaporeans who hold
conservative views about sex.
AIDS activists in Singapore have urged authorities to curb what they say is an
"alarming" rise in the number of gay men infected with HIV on the island.
HIV infections among homosexual men in Singapore rose from 12 cases reported in
2000 to 40 cases in 2003, according to health ministry statistics. In the first
10 months of 2004, 77 new HIV cases were reported among homosexual men.
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