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US lifts HIV/Aids immigration ban | US lifts HIV/Aids immigration ban |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The US has lifted a 22-year immigration ban which has stopped anyone with HIV/Aids from entering the country. | The US has lifted a 22-year immigration ban which has stopped anyone with HIV/Aids from entering the country. |
President Obama said the ban was not compatible with US plans to be a leader in the fight against the disease. | President Obama said the ban was not compatible with US plans to be a leader in the fight against the disease. |
The new rules come into force on Monday and the US plans to host a global HIV/Aids summit for the first time in 2012. | |
The ban was imposed at the height of a global panic about the disease at the end of the 1980s. | The ban was imposed at the height of a global panic about the disease at the end of the 1980s. |
It put the US in a group of just 12 countries, also including Libya and Saudi Arabia, that excluded anyone suffering from HIV/Aids. | It put the US in a group of just 12 countries, also including Libya and Saudi Arabia, that excluded anyone suffering from HIV/Aids. |
The BBC's Charles Scanlon, in Miami, says that improving treatments and evolving public perceptions have helped to bring about the change. | The BBC's Charles Scanlon, in Miami, says that improving treatments and evolving public perceptions have helped to bring about the change. |
Rachel Tiven, head of the campaign group Immigration Equality, told the BBC that the step was long overdue. | Rachel Tiven, head of the campaign group Immigration Equality, told the BBC that the step was long overdue. |
"The 2012 World Aids Conference, due to be held in the United States, was in jeopardy as a result of the restrictions. It's now likely to go ahead as planned," she said. | "The 2012 World Aids Conference, due to be held in the United States, was in jeopardy as a result of the restrictions. It's now likely to go ahead as planned," she said. |
In October, President Obama said the entry ban had been "rooted in fear rather than fact". | In October, President Obama said the entry ban had been "rooted in fear rather than fact". |
He said: "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 with HIV from entering our own country." | He said: "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 with HIV from entering our own country." |