Obama ends US HIV travel ban

The ban on HIV-positive visitors travelling to the United States is history.

news.PinkPaper.com
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
30 October 2009
The ban on HIV-positive visitors travelling to the United States is history.

President Obama has signed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Act and lifted the HIV travel and immigration ban from the New Year. He said the move would save lives.

Obama said: “Twenty-two years ago, in a decision rooted in fear rather than fact, the United States instituted a travel ban on entry into the country for people living with HIV/AIDS. Now, we talk about reducing the stigma of this disease – yet we’ve treated a visitor living with it as a threat. We lead the world when it comes to helping stem the AIDS pandemic – yet we are one of only a dozen countries that still bar people from HIV from entering our own country.

“If we want to be the global leader in combating HIV/AIDS, we need to act like it. And that’s why, on Monday my administration will publish a final rule that eliminates the travel ban effective just after the New Year.

“Congress and President Bush began this process last year, and they ought to be commended for it. We are finishing the job. It’s a step that will encourage people to get tested and get treatment, it’s a step that will keep families together, and it’s a step that will save lives.”
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