This is an archive of the Treatment Action Campaign's public documents from December 1998 until October 2008. I created this website because the TAC's website appears unmaintained and people were concerned that it
was becoming increasingly hard to find important documents.

The menu items have been slightly edited and a new stylesheet applied to the site. But none of the documents have been edited, not even for minor errors. The text appears on this site as obtained from the Internet Archive.

The period covered by the archive encompassed the campaign for HIV medicines, the civil disobedience campaigns, the Competition Commission complaints, the 2008 xenophobic violence and the PMTCT, Khayelitsha health workers and Matthias Rath court cases.

Letter from international health and human rights experts to Mbeki and Zuma on the need for a human rights approach to TB

Dear President Mbeki and ANC President Zuma,

On the 3rd of July at the South African National Tuberculosis (TB) Conference in Durban, Mr. Thami Mseleku, Director General of the Department of Health, stated publicly that: “human rights are not relevant to the considerations of health policy in a developmental state”. As international health and human rights experts, we are extremely disturbed that someone holding such a central post with responsibility for health in South Africa would express such sentiment and display such a fundamental misunderstanding about human rights as a critical foundation of the health response in developing countries. The realization and protection of human rights is fundamental to reducing people’s vulnerability to infection, disease and mortality, as well as to reduce morbidity and other negative consequences of disease, e.g. discrimination, loss of employment and social support, wrongful imprisonment. 

His statement comes more than two years after world leaders – including the South African government – officially reaffirmed their commitment to the full realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms as an essential element of the global response to HIV/AIDS. Mr. Mseleku’s comments were made as a direct criticism of a presentation by Mr. Mark Heywood, Deputy Chairperson of the South African National AIDS Council, which clearly outlined the legal obligation of the South African government to implement an effective, reasonable and rights-based response to health needs in the country. As you know, the human rights to life, dignity, equality and privacy, as well as the rights to acces  to food, water, housing, healthcare and social security are guaranteed under the South African Constitution, and all organs of the state are obliged to respect, protect, promote and fulfil those rights. In addition, South Africa is a signatory to many international conventions and covenants on human rights, which address socio-economic rights, including the right to health. 

The success and sustainability of any health policy or programme in any country is, to a large extent, dependent on its consideration of the human rights of all the people it affects: patients, health care workers and the general public. This is particularly true for both TB and HIV, which disproportionately affect poor, marginalized and vulnerable populations, whose civil, social and economic rights are often in jeopardy before they are struck by these diseases. Neglecting the State’s duty to ensure the realization of human rights not only renders such populations more susceptible to these epidemics and their effects, but also impedes their access to essential interventions. For instance: 

  • Poor people often live in substandard and crowded housing without proper ventilation which promotes the spread of TB;
  • The nutritional status of poor people can affect their susceptibility to active TB disease;
  • Women and girls face widespread discrimination and gender-based violence, including domestic violence, that fuels their HIV risk and impedes their access to vital health information and services;
  • Children and youth lack unfettered access to HIV and TB information, sexual and life-skills education, and pediatric formulations of HIV medicines;
  • Marginalized populations, such as people who use drugs and sex workers, are driven from HIV and TB services by discrimination and violence, often at the hands of police officers and judges charged with enforcing narcotics and prostitution laws;
  • People living with HIV continue to face discrimination and violence, losing their jobs and homes and being rejected by their families and community.
  • Incarceration of TB patients against their will and under conditions that do not respect their human rightS can drive people with TB away from health services and expose other patients and health care workers to TB nosocomial transmission.

We call upon Thami Mseleku to reconsider his comment that human rights are not relevant to the considerations of health policy in a developmental state. In particular, to the extent that he was asserting that this view is or should be reflected in South African health policy, we would call on you to publicly affirm that both government and ANC policy reject such an approach. 

We are also calling upon you both to reaffirm South Africa’s commitment to human rights, not only in health, but across the spectrum of the work of your government and your party. Free and fair elections are one measure of a democratic, progressive state. The promotion and fulfilment of people’s civil, political, social and economic rights is the highest goal to which political leaders of all parties should aspire.

Yours truly,

Joe Amon PhD MSPH
Director, Health and Human Rights Program
Human Rights Watch
UNITED STATES

Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH
Director of the Center for Public Health and Human Rights
Johns Hopkins University
UNITED STATES

Michaela Clayton LLB
Director
AIDS and Rights Alliance for Southern Africa
NAMIBIA

Richard Elliott LLB, LLM
Executive Director
Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
CANADA

Adriaan van Es MD
Coordinator
International Federation of Health and Human Rights Organisations
THE NETHERLANDS

Ryan Goodman
Rita E. Hauser Professor of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
Director, Human Rights Program
Harvard Law School
UNITED STATES

Sofia Gruskin JD, MIA
Associate Professor in Health and Human Rights
Director, Program on International Health and Human Rights
Harvard School of Public Health
UNITED STATES

Ralf Jurgens LLM, Dr.Jur
Consultant, HIV/AIDS, health, policy and human rights
CANADA

Jim Yong Kim, MD, PhD
Division of Global Health Equity
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine
Harvard Medical School
François Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights
Harvard School of Public Health
UNITED STATES

Stephen Lewis
Co-Director AIDS-Free World
CANADA

Alice M. Miller, JD
Senior Scholar, Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice
UC Berkeley School of Law
UNITED STATES

Richard Parker, PhD
Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University
President, Associação Brasileira Interdisciplinar de AIDS (ABIA)
Co-Chair, Sexuality Policy Watch (SPW)
USA and BRAZIL

Mindy Jane Roseman, JD, PhD
Academic Director, Human Rights Program
Lecturer on Law
Harvard Law School
UNITED STATES

Meena Saraswathi Seshu
Director
SANGRAM
INDIA

Christine Stegling
Director
Botswana Network on Ethics, Law and HIV/AIDS
BOTSWANA

Tripti Tandon, MA, LLB
Senior Technical and Policy Advisor
Lawyers Collective HIV/AIDS Unit
INDIA

Daniel Tarantola MD
Professor of Health and Human Rights
The University of New South Wales
AUSTRALIA

Alicia Ely Yamin, JD MPH
Joseph H. Flom Fellow on Global Health and Human Rights
Harvard Law School
UNITED STATES

Wan Yanhai, MD
Director
Beijing Aizhixing Institute
CHINA

 

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