God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

The knives are out at home…

It seems the knives are out in the Catholic church especially of my country of birth and in Europe – everybody wants dialogue but it seems that every fraction is fighting seemingly assuming that their position is the right way into a bright future of the RC church. The permission of the “old tridentine mass” as the extraordinary mass and the remarks of the pope regarding the condom use in the book of Mr Seewald – mixed with the abuse cases, the attempt to change the text of the mass to make it more “latin like” – from outside it looks frightening – fulled by irresponsible essays and news of so-called “catholic” websites in German language lacking every inch of the ethos of Catholicism and using a language rather be found in the times of the thirties of the last century in Germany. The just published declaration of theologian in Germany calling for a review of celibacy, women ordination and viri probati shows that since the II Vatican Council, nothing really has moved in these fields – binding our energy for matters which should have been resolved a long time ago.

If we really want to tackle the issues of the people and the faithful of our times, we have to stop fighting but first of all listening to each other. What energy is burned to hold up a certain ideology in our church or a so-called “tradition” – anxiety instead of freedom, attack and defence instead of listening to God’s good spirit.
And obviously this has also consequences for the topic, this blog is reflecting about. How much energy some put in to defend “Humanae Vitae” in a way which simply made it impossible within the church to develop an answer to the question: protection of life. And as Benedict XVI dared to speak his theological mind not saying anything new – for days the newspaper were full of comments and the Vatican had to issue three statements to interpret the interview of the pope in the right light. And now Vatican sources tell us that there is a new word on HIV/AIDS to expect, looking at it from a Christian perspective.  I hover between hope and despair waiting for this new paper.

I really would like to see a stop on all this navel gazing – how we can serve the people and make their life meaningful, that is the only question we should ask ourselves as members of or church, how we can open ourselves up to God’s spirit without always killing the breeze out of anxiety, stubbornness and a picture of God, which in reality is already outdated when we put it together. Then whoever and where ever God is, I believe that he/she is much more than we ever can think of. And for that, I am indeed grateful.

Serving in the field of HIV/AIDS would mean then to look anew at what sexuality constitutes, what sciences are telling us, how we have developed in the last 100 years. And from there to see how we can create a meaningful and responsible context for sexual activities which also matches the realities of us humans. Seeing how many young people world-wide are still dying we also have to reflect more on what life and death means and how we can learn to speak of a meaningful life, even if it is short. We have to put our view of a “successful” life on the test bench. HIV and AIDS has also to do with evolution, with a virus meeting a new host and being not able to co-exist in a way, other bacteria are living with us since ages.  The questions of justice and peace are also still not solved and I am sure the topic HIV and AIDS with all consequences could contribute immensely towards those questions.

So much to do… to reflect … to get down to business …

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , ,

Legal matters – Swiss court acepts criminal HIV exposure is only “hypothetical”

In the first ruling of its kind in the world, the Geneva Court of Justice has quashed an 18-month prison sentence given to a 34-year-old HIV-positive African migrant who was convicted of HIV exposure by a lower court in December 2008, after accepting expert testimony from Professor Bernard Hirschel – one of the authors of the Swiss Federal Commission for HIV/AIDS consensus statement on the effect of treatment on transmission – that the risk of sexual HIV transmission during unprotected sex on successful treatment is one in 100,000.
The case began in Lausanne in March 2006. The man, originally from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was convicted of having unprotected sex without disclosing his HIV status to a female complainant. Although the woman was not infected, Article 231 of the Swiss Penal Code allows prosecutions against HIV-positive individuals for having unprotected sex, with or without disclosure. Individuals can also be prosecuted under Article 122, for “an attempt to engender grievous bodily harm”.

The man was also found guilty of several other crimes, including theft, fraud and sexual harassment, and was sentenced to three years in prison. A February 2007 appeal reduced this to 28 months.  A second complaint last year led to the man standing trial again, in Geneva in November 2008. According to a report in The Geneva Tribune, an expert medical witness had testified that although treatment greatly reduces the risk of transmission, there remained a residual risk.
Although the man’s lawyer, Nicole Riedle, had entered the statement by the Swiss Federal Commission for HIV/AIDS into evidence, and Geneva’s deputy public prosecutor, Yves Bertossa, had wanted to suspend the hearing in order to consult with the Commission, the lower Geneva court declined to accept any further evidence and he was sentenced to 18 months in prison in December 2008.
Late last month, Mr Bertossa told the Geneva Court of Justice that he was persuaded by the Swiss Federal Commission for HIV/AIDS that the risk of transmission for an HIV-positive individual on successful treatment was less than one in 100,000 and that – under the circumstances – he wanted to drop the charges.
On Monday, the Geneva Court of Justice acquitted the man, who was freed after spending almost three months in prison.
Significantly, it was Geneva’s deputy public prosecutor, Yves Bertossa, who called for the appeal. He told Le Temps that despite the fact that there is still some debate regarding the residual risks of transmission in people on successful treatment this should not influence justice: “One shouldn’t convict people for hypothetical risks,” he said.
Professor Hirschel said that he was very pleased with the outcome. It was, he said, the main reason that he and his colleagues were motivated to issue their January 2008 statement.
Deborah Glejser of Swiss civil society organisation, Groupe SIDA Geneve, said that although the law allows for prosecutions for unprotected sex even when disclosure has taken place, in practice, prosecutions for HIV exposure usually only take place when there is no disclosure, and that a suspended sentence (for a first offence with no aggravating circumstance) is the norm.
Switzerland is made up of 26 cantons, of which Geneva is considered to be the most “liberal”, according to Ms. Glejser. However, since there is no real centralised information about cases, it is not easy to give a comprehensive picture of the pattern of prosecutions and sentences across Switzerland.
She added that Monday’s ruling suggests that, in Switzerland, effectively treated HIV-positive individuals should no longer be prosecuted for having unprotected sex. Having already been contacted by advocates from around the world, she hoped that this ruling will have consequences for other jurisdictions that have HIV exposure laws.
Last May, a five member US Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces panel discussed the effect of treatment on transmission following the appeal of an HIV-positive soldier who had previously pleaded guilty to HIV exposure, following unprotected sex with two women without disclosing his HIV status. Although the majority did not agree, and did not allow the accused soldier’s guilty plea to be set aside, two members of the panel found the medical expert’s testimony – that it was highly unlikely that the soldier could have infected either women because of his low viral load – valid enough to question HIV exposure laws.
And last July, a Canadian court explored the Swiss statement following a submission from Clato Mabior’s defence team that, at the time he had unprotected sex with six women without disclosing his HIV status to them, he did not believe he was infectious. Although expert testimony concluded that Mr Mabior may have been uninfectious for some of the time, this was not enough to convince the judge, who noted that neither the CDC nor WHO/UNAIDS agreed with the Swiss, and that the crimes of which Mr Mabior was accused took place prior to there being any public statement on the effect of treatment on transmission.
Following Monday’s ruling, however, Geneva’s deputy public prosecutor, Yves Bertossa, believes it is only a matter of time before other jurisdictions realise that prosecutions for HIV exposure should not take place when the accused is on successful antiretroviral therapy. He told Radio Lac: “There are some medical advances which can change the law. I think that in other [parts of Switzerland] or in other countries, the same conclusions should apply to their laws.”
Thomas Lyssy from the Swiss AIDS Federation, told aidsmap that they were “very pleased with the judgment of the court. We certainly hope that this precedent will be followed in other Swiss cantons in future cases of a comparable nature.”
References: aidsmap and Edwin J Bernard

Source and full text:

http://www.positivenation.co.uk/news_world/article.php?article_id=159

Filed under: General, HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , , ,

Thank you

All those, who supported HOPE Cape Town and its work my gratitude and thanks. It was an exciting year full of everything, life has to offer. Stay connected with us and follow us also through 2011 – the World AIDS Awareness Expedition will bring Joachim Franz, me and a whole team of activists into 51 countries in 2011. A personal but also a sociopolitical challenge. You can be part of it via this blog from April till August 2011.
New structures of HOPE Cape Town will assist us to be even more on the forefront of service delivery for those who are battling with HIV and AIDS.

Last but not least thanks to all my colleagues and co-workers of HOPE Cape Town for their dedicated work

Fr Stefan


PS: The book “God – AIDS – Africa” was published in 2007 telling stories and reflections of the work in the fields of HIV and AIDS and the RC church in South Africa. An English translation is now available for those who want to read the book in their mother tongue. The book is free for reading and further distribution.

http://www.stefanhippler.com/ebook/God-Aids-Africa.html


Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Networking, , , , ,

Web-based translation of “God-AIDS-Africa”

The book “God – AIDS – Africa” was published in 2007 telling stories and reflections of the work in the fields of HIV and AIDS and the RC church in South Africa. An English translation is now available for those who want to read the book in their mother tongue. The book is free for reading and further distribution.

http://www.stefanhippler.com/ebook/God-Aids-Africa.html

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Medical and Research, Networking, Politics and Society, Reflection, Society and living environment, , , , , , , , , ,

POZ Magazine: Protein Discovery Helps Explain the Body’s Failure to Kill HIV

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Researchers at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago have discovered a protein produced by HIV that keeps infected cells from signaling the  immune system that they are harboring the virus and should be killed. These data, which suggest a new target for HIV  drugs, were published online October 18 in the journal Cell Host & Microbe and are discussed in a release available at EurekAlert.
Among the most powerful tools in the immune system’s toolbox for killing infected or defective cells are natural killer (NK) cells. They are unlike HIV-specific CD8 cells, which require a lot of stimulation by other parts of the immune system before they can go into action. NK don’t require virus-specific stimulation before they can recognize and kill infected cells. Yet, for reasons not fully understood, they don’t work the way they should against HIV.

Given the potency of NK cells, and their potential to run amok and kill healthy cells, they must first encounter three different types of proteins on the surface of a potentially infected cell. First, an infected cell needs to express a type of receptor called a major histocompatibiliy (MHC) receptor, which indicates that the cell belongs to the person. The NK cell must also encounter a stimulatory molecule and a costimulatory molecule on the target cell’s surface. If all three of these molecules are present and bind to the corresponding NK cell receptors, then the NK cell will release a chemical that degrades the infected cell.
During the past two decades, immunologists have investigated how NK cells interact with HIV-infected cells, but researchers have long been baffled by a key finding. While the kinds of cellular proteins that are supposed to flag the cell for destruction do get made during the HIV replication process and travel to the surface of the cell, NK cells still fail to recognize and kill them.
It turned out that yet another type of protein called Natural killer T-cell and B-cell Antigen (NTB-A) is also needed at the cell’s surface to alert NK cells that the cell is infected and needs to be destroyed. In the case of HIV, the NTB-A didn’t make it to the surface. Researchers, however, found that HIV did not directly suppress the NTB-A. So why didn’t it make it to the surface to alert the killer cells?
Ankur Shah, PhD, from Rush University, and his colleagues now think they know the answer. Shah’s team found that an accessory protein made by HIV, called Vpu, keeps NTB-A from reaching the cell’s surface. Shah’s team proved this by altering the Vpu protein made by HIV in cells in test tubes and then observing what happened when they added NK cells. The NK cells were 100 times as likely to recognize and kill cells infected with HIV that produced the defective Vpu protein than those infected with HIV that produced the normal Vpu protein.  “With this information, we now have a major new target for drug therapies

Source:   http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/hiv_vpu_nkcells_761_19447.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, , ,

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