Lisa Power
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The United States administration is to sign paperwork to overturn the ban on foreign nationals with HIV entering the USA. The ban has been in place since 1987 and will be lifted early next year.
Last week President Obama announced the repeal of the travel ban, describing the 22-year-old policy as a
"decision rooted in fear rather than fact.”
Lisa Power, Head of Policy at Terrence Higgins Trust said:
“Terrence Higgins Trust has campaigned for many years to end this discriminatory policy. We hope its ending sends a strong signal to governments and politicians globally who support such pointless gestures. Entry bans have no justification on public health grounds. Their only real impact is to increase stigma and prevent ordinary people with HIV from getting on with their lives.”
Terrence Higgins Trust and others have campaigned for many years for the policy to be lifted. The UN Secretary General has congratulated President Obama on the move.
The ban meant everyone entering the US was required to state that they don’t have a communicable disease, alongside not being a terrorist, a Nazi or a criminal.
People living with HIV who would like further information on their right to travel internationally can contact THT Direct on
0845 1221 200 from 10am to 10pm weekdays and from 12pm to 6pm weekends, or email
info@tht.org.uk
For more information about THT view:
www.tht.org.uk