The story appears on

Page A12

November 19, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Indonesia ‘sorry’ for gaffe over HIV publicity posters

INDONESIA’S health ministry has apologized after a printing error led to posters being put up claiming that HIV can be transmitted through mosquito bites, swimming and sneezing, an official said yesterday.

Social media was flooded with angry comments after the ministry’s attempt to launch a campaign to debunk myths about HIV backfired badly in a country where people with the virus are much stigmatized.

The controversy came as the virus was hitting the headlines globally after US actor Charlie Sheen revealed he was HIV-positive — and had paid millions of US dollars in hush money to people who knew about his infection to keep them quiet.

The Indonesian plan involved putting up posters on commuter trains in the capital Jakarta stating that HIV cannot be transmitted through mosquito bites, swimming and sneezing, as well as human saliva and sweat.

But the printing company managed to miss out the word “not” from the posters and then failed to get final approval from officials, meaning the banners reinforced the very beliefs they were meant to challenge.

Hundreds of posters were plastered on trains at the weekend, but have now been removed following an outcry.

“The ministry has to carry out a massive and systematic awareness campaign to undo this blunder,” said Aditya Wardhana, an activist from Indonesia AIDS Coalition.

Prominent HIV activist Fajar Jasmin tweeted that the botched campaign was a “stupid, fatal mistake.”

Senior health ministry official Muhammad Subuh admitted the mistake was due to a “printing error.”

“We have made a public apology and now the banners are being removed and will be replaced with the correct ones,” he said.

Subuh said the printing company failed to show the ministry the final version of the posters before issuing them as they were supposed to.

The company has also apologized for the error.

However, Subuh insisted the controversy was a “blessing in disguise” as many people recognized immediately it was a mistake, showing progress had been made in spreading awareness about the true causes of transmission.

Activists dismissed his claim, with Wardhana saying that HIV campaigners would now have to be sent to train stations to inform people of the error.

The human immunodeficiency virus, which can lead to AIDS, is mainly transmitted via sexual intercourse or needle sharing.

Awareness about HIV in Indonesia remains poor despite the fact that more than 660,000 people are estimated to be living with the virus, according to the United Nations.

Ignorance about the virus has come from the highest echelons of government — in February, then-trade minister Rachmat Gobel sparked outrage by claiming that second-hand clothes could spread HIV as he campaigned to stop the import of used garments.

He has since been removed from his job.

Actor Charlie Sheen on Tuesday revealed that he was HIV-positive, after years of controversy over his drug and alcohol use as well as his penchant for hiring prostitutes.

“It’s a hard three letters to absorb, you know?,” said the 50-year-old. “It’s a turning point in one’s life.”

Since 1981, about 78 million people have been infected by HIV worldwide, according to UN figures. South Africa has the world’s greatest number of HIV-positive citizens.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend