Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for the opportunity to address the subcommittee today on behalf of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.
We are one of the world's leading organizations working on legal and human rights issues raised by HIV. That work includes doing research and policy analysis, as well as providing technical assistance to a variety of organizations that are working on AIDS law and human rights. At the moment, we have been collaborating for some time with one of the leading NGOs in China working on HIV and human rights, the Aizhixing Institute.
The Legal Network is part of the Canadian Coalition on Human Rights in China for a special reason. In that country, as in Canada and elsewhere in the world, human rights both fuel and result from the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
For example, AIDS afflicts a disproportionate number of people who are already marginalized in society as a whole through stigmatization, discrimination and unfair criminalization, particularly people who use drugs, sex trade workers, men who have sexual relations with men, and migrant workers.
People living with HIV/AIDS in China, particularly those who acquired HIV during the 1990s through a massive government-sponsored blood collection scheme, have been unlawfully detained and harassed by police for asserting their right to treatment and care, as well as the right to assistance for their children, many of whom by now have been orphaned.
We have seen that AIDS activists have been repeatedly persecuted for their attempts to assert the rights of people living with HIV and AIDS, as well as the right to HIV prevention services for some of the most vulnerable populations, such as those I just mentioned: sex workers, men who have sex with men, migrants, and people who use drugs.
Even the way that China has been managing a grant from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria--to which Canada is an important donor, I should note--has marginalized legitimate community-based NGO representatives of groups of people living with HIV and groups of those populations that are vulnerable to HIV.
Those are some of the reasons the Canada-China bilateral human rights dialogue in 2004 focused on HIV, and they're the reasons our organization agreed to be part of the dialogue in China that year. On the occasion of that particular dialogue, we were in fact able to meet with some people living with HIV in Beijing and with Chinese officials who were working on HIV and who expressed an interest in human rights. This is an openness that is fairly recent in China.
Notwithstanding the fact that we participated in that dialogue, we have some very serious concerns, and we share the concerns that other coalition members have raised about the dialogue process. In our view, it remains flawed, so we join the other members of the coalition, from whom you've heard, in welcoming the government's review of this dialogue, and we welcome the recommendations that Professor Charles Burton has made in his report.
If we are to be truly effective in responding to HIV, we must pay attention to human rights. This certainly applies in the case of China, where gross violations of human rights linked to HIV continue. In order to be effective, China has to address human rights as a central part of its response to HIV, and it needs to do that in a way that is transparent and that includes meaningful involvement of the communities affected by HIV and AIDS.
If this dialogue is going to contribute in some way to that human rights-based response to the AIDS epidemic in China, then a number of things need to be done to improve that dialogue. We note in particular the recommendations the broader coalition has put before you; we endorse them entirely.
First, the human rights dialogue needs to involve higher-level officials on both the Canadian and the Chinese sides. We suggest that it be raised at least to the level of a deputy director within the Department of Foreign Affairs.
We also stress that as a number of other speakers have highlighted, the discussion about human rights needs to be central to Canada's interaction with China, not simply a sideshow dealing from other policy issues.
We also suggest that the report on that dialogue engage in some way with this subcommittee, rather than simply being something that remains within the Department of Foreign Affairs.
It is critical that the dialogue involve civil society organizations in some significant way, particularly civil society organizations that are independent of government. The emergence of a non-governmental sector in China is fairly recent, but there are in fact independent NGOs struggling to raise issues of human rights in China related to HIV, and their voices need to be part of any interaction if we are actually going to see a human rights-based response to AIDS.
Finally, we need Canada to be much more vocal and visible and active in its support for human rights defenders in China.
In the past two years, China has tried to convince the international community that it is reacting to HIV/AIDS through programs that reflect internationally recognized exemplary practices. At the international conference on AIDS that was held in Toronto in August, Chinese authorities took every opportunity to boast about their so-called comprehensive HIV/AIDS services for drug users and their free care and treatment programs for persons living with HIV/AIDS.
And yet the NGOs continue to document Chinese abuses of people living with HIV, of their children and families, as well as horrible human rights violations against people who use drugs in forced rehabilitation camps.
In June of this year I had the good fortune to be in Beijing for a week meeting with NGOs working on AIDS and human rights. During the course of the week, with people who are working on the front lines, we heard repeatedly of people being detained or beaten by police simply for assembling peacefully and protesting the lack of access to treatment, notwithstanding the Chinese government's stated policy of access to free care. We also heard repeatedly about systemic discrimination, especially in employment and health services, against people living with HIV, as well as with hepatitis B and C, I should add, and we heard repeatedly about the detention of sex workers in labour camps.
Just last Friday we received the disturbing news that one of our colleagues at the Aizhixing Institute, one of China's most famous AIDS activists, Dr. Wan Yanhai, was detained again by the police in Beijing. Four years ago, on the eve of his travelling to Canada to receive an international award from our organization and Human Rights Watch for human rights advocacy on AIDS, Dr. Wan Yanhai was detained. At that time, he was held for three weeks, and it was only after a global outcry that he was released. This time, we were, of course, very worried when he went missing, when police showed up at the offices of the Aizhixing Institute and took him away for questioning. Fortunately, he was released and returned to the office on Monday, but only after he was compelled to cancel a conference that was going to be looking at the issue of blood safety and compensation for people who had been infected through the government blood collection schemes of the 1990s.
We have heard, unfortunately, however, that there remain at least four other activists connected with this conference who are in detention at this point, to the best of our knowledge, including Mr. Kong Delin, one of the leading hemophilia activists in China. Three others, whose names we don't know at this point, remain detained.
We are looking forward to the day when Canada and China, in their bilateral human rights dialogue, will actually be engaged in an effective process of realizing the human rights of people living with HIV and vulnerable to HIV, and we welcome the steps that this subcommittee could take to achieving that goal.
Thank you.