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"You can create a lifelong problem in that particular child," Essajee said.
The Global Fund said last week that the Ukrainian government risks losing a $305 million five-year grant for AIDS prevention and harm reduction programs due to start next year if it does not restore the drug supplies and stop its harassment of drug users with HIV and the non-governmental groups trying to help them.
The government has admitted it was late in procuring the drugs, but sought to downplay the supply problem, claiming only dozens were affected and promising the drugs would be supplied soon.
In Ukraine, where health care is free, the state has committed to procuring HIV medication and providing treatment. In the West, HIV drugs are usually purchased by pharmacies and paid for under national insurance schemes or private insurers.
Moreover, the Health Ministry said the supply crisis has actually been a good thing, because delays allowed the government to invite new bidders, lower costs and buy more drugs for more patients this year.
"You cannot look at the problem from the point of view of advocating for the patients -- we as government employees look at it on a global scale," said Svetlana Cherenko, an AIDS specialist with the Health Ministry. "The problem itself is very small compared to what could have been had we purchased them (the drugs) at high prices."
Meanwhile, the government has sent prosecutors to search the offices of AIDS support groups across the country and dispatched police to collect personal information from drug users in methadone therapy, including their medical records and whether or not they have HIV, even though such information is confidential.
In the eastern Sumy region, the government denied patients their daily methadone dose until they answered all the questions, an activist said. In the southern city of Odessa, one HIV-positive man's said police disclosed his status to his neighbors, prompting his wife and son to flee in shame.
Experts say such harassment will send these people back into the shadows, returning them to dirty-needle drug use and further inflaming the HIV crisis as it increasingly spreads from risk groups into the general public, experts say.
"Efforts at trying to suppress programs or harass patients just give the virus a better chance to spread," said Tamberg of the Global Fund.
Interior Minister Anatoly Mohilyov said he is collecting personal information from drug users "because these people are from a risk group and we must know about them."
The Prosecutor General's Office declined to say why it is investigating AIDS groups. The non-governmental groups say the government is tired of their criticism.
"Our organization is a threat to all the corrupt schemes that exist in the health care system," said Sherembey of the Network. "They don't want to have opponents like us."
[Associated
Press;
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