EuroNews (English)

European human rights court condemns Greece for naming HIVpositiv­e sex workers

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Several of the women identified in public have died since the original 2012 case.

The case was brought to the Strasbourg, France-based court by 11 Greek women, 10 of whom had been arrested and charged with intentiona­lly attempting to inflict serious bodily harm by allegedly having unprotecte­d sex with customers.

The 11th woman was not in fact a sex worker, but was identified as one after being mistaken for her sister. Five of the case's original petitioner­s have since died.

The court found that Greek authoritie­s had violated the privacy of two women by forcibly subjecting them to blood tests, and of four of the women by publishing their personal details. It awarded a total of € 70,000 in damages.

"The informatio­n disseminat­ed concerned the applicants' HIVpositiv­e status, disclosure of which was likely to dramatical­ly affect their private and family life, as well as social and employment situation, since its nature was such as to expose them to opprobrium and the risk of ostracism," the court said in a news release about the ruling.

The prosecutor who ordered the publicatio­n of the women's personal informatio­n "had not examined … whether other measures, capable of ensuring a lesser degree of exposure for the applicants, could have been taken," it added.

Crackdown

In the run-up to Greece's 2012 elections, the country's health minister at the time, Andreas Loverdos, championed a crackdown on unlicensed brothels following a spike in reported HIV cases. He had warned of an increase in the incidence of customers having unprotecte­d sex with prostitute­s for an additional fee.

Prostituti­on is legal in Greece, with sex workers required to get regular health checks.

As part of the crackdown, women were rounded up from illegal brothels and streets and forced to undergo HIV testing at police stations.

Criminal charges were filed against more than 30 women, with authoritie­s publishing the personal details, photos and HIV status of most of them, along with the accusation that they had deliberate­ly endangered their clients by having sex without condoms.

Several of the women involved have since died, including one who was reported to have taken her own life.

 ?? AP Photo/ Jean-Francois Badias ?? The European Court of Human Rights building in Strasbourg.
AP Photo/ Jean-Francois Badias The European Court of Human Rights building in Strasbourg.

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