India’s health minister in gay gaffe

Minister says he was quoted out of context amid calls for him to be sacked after describing homosexuality as a disease.

India's health minister in gay gaffe
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The conference on HIV/AIDS was attended by top government officials including the PM and ruling party chief [AFP]

Ghulam Nabi Azad, India’s health minister, has provoked furore after he termed homosexuality as an unnatural “disease” from the West at an HIV/AIDS conference in India’s capital, New Delhi.

Activists said on Tuesday that the comments had set back campaigns for gay rights and HIV awareness in India, although Azad said he had been misquoted.

Anjali Gopalan, who heads the NAZ Foundation, a rights group that works with HIV positive people and promotes equal rights for homosexuals, said Azad’s initial comments were deeply troubling.

“These comments help no cause. It’s definitely not going to help in our fight against HIV,” she told the Associated Press news agency.

Anand Grover, the UN special rapporteur on health, said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, should consider firing Azad.

“His remarks are completely insensitive. It lowers the dignity of the gay community,” he said. “It is unacceptable to have a minister talking like this.”

“How can the health minister say something so unscientific and irrational?” Nitin Karani, a gay rights activist told a television new channel.

“He needs to apologise immediately or he needs to go.”

‘Minister misquoted’

In a hastily called news conference on Tuesday, the health minister said he had been “quoted out of context”, although video of Monday’s speech has aired repeatedly on Indian television.

“Some people have played with the words. I have been quoted out of context,” he said. “My reference was to HIV as a disease. As health minister, I know (male homosexual sex) is not a disease.”

His original speech echoed a common refrain in the conservative South Asian nation that homosexuality is a Western import.

“It is a matter of concern that, unfortunately, in the world and in our country this disease has arisen, where men are having sex with men, which is unnatural and should not be happening,” Azad said on Monday.

The prime minister, ruling Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi and a slew of government ministers were present at the conference.

Roughly 2.5 million Indians have HIV, making it the country with the largest number of people living with the virus in Asia.

Experts say the marginalisation of gay people keeps them isolated and makes it harder for HIV/AIDS awareness messages to reach them.

“If you’re not going to invest in community building, then gay people will continue to be marginalised,” Gopalan said.

Homosexuality decriminalised

In 2009, a Delhi court struck down a colonial era law – Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code – that made sex between people of the same gender punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

While actual criminal prosecutions were rare, the law was frequently used to harass people.

The court ruling was noteworthy in a country where even heterosexual sex is rarely discussed openly.

Over the last decade, homosexuals have slowly gained a degree of acceptance in a few parts of India, especially its big cities. Many bars have gay nights, and some high-profile Bollywood films have dealt with gay issues.

The last two years have also seen large gay pride parades in New Delhi and other big cities such as Mumbai and Kolkata.

Still, being gay remains deeply taboo in most of the country, and many homosexuals hide their sexual orientation from friends and families.

This is not the first time Azad’s words have embarrassed the government. A few years ago, he suggested Indians watch television instead of having sex as a means to stem population growth in the nation of 1.2 billion people.

Source: News Agencies