PEACE CORP SLAMMED FOR FIRING HIV+ VOLUNTEER
The world-renowned US Peace Corp has been slammed for sending home a volunteer because he is HIV positive.
An independent United States federal agency, the Peace Corps was established 1961 with the aim of promoting “world peace and friendship” around the globe through volunteer men and women. It is active in around 70 countries.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has demanded that the organisation change its policy of barring people with HIV from serving as volunteers. The ACLU is acting on behalf of a volunteer who was sent home from his post in the Ukraine and terminated after he tested positive for HIV.
“I joined the Peace Corps because I wanted to learn more about the world and help people,” said Jeremiah Johnson. “It was hard enough to learn that I had contracted HIV, but to then be shipped home and told I was unworthy of finishing my service was incredibly humiliating.”
Johnson, now 25, began his tour as a Peace Corps volunteer in December 2006. He tested negative for HIV prior to beginning his service. For nearly thirteen months, he was the sole volunteer in Rozdilna, Ukraine, where he taught English to middle and high school students.
In January 2008, Johnson, who was in Kiev to attend a Russian language program with other volunteers, received a mid-service medical examination and opted to take an HIV test.
After the results confirmed that he was positive for the disease, he was immediately told that he could no longer work in the country because of a Ukrainian law barring people with HIV from working in the country. He was also told he would not be able to finish his service elsewhere.
Although he had no health problems, he was only allowed to return to Rozdilna for two days to pack his bags and say goodbye to the people he had met during his tour. He was forced to abandon projects that he had been developing to help the community.
Johnson was then sent to Washington, D.C., for an end-of-service medical exam. In DC, he again asked Peace Corps officials to explain why he was being terminated and asked if he could continue his service elsewhere, but these requests were denied. Instead, he was given an automatic medical termination, stating HIV as the reason for his termination.
The ACLU charges that it is illegal for the Peace Corps to discriminate against Johnson because he has HIV. The letter cites a recent federal appeals court decision finding that it is illegal for the Foreign Service to bar people with HIV from serving.
“There is not a single justifiable reason for the Peace Corp to bar people with HIV from serving as volunteers,” said Rebecca Shore, an attorney with the ACLU’s AIDS Project.
“Jeremiah was, and continues to be, in good health, fully capable of performing his responsibilities. It is especially disappointing that an agent of our government would have an illegal and discriminatory policy barring people with HIV from trying to make the world better.”
The ACLU’s letter demands that the Peace Corps change its policy or confirm that it does not have a policy of automatically excluding all people with HIV.
“It was hard being sent home the way I was. I had no time to plan for my return. I was forced to have a lot of conversations I wasn’t really ready to have. I had no money, no job and no place to live. Fortunately, my family welcomed me back with open arms and helped me get back on my feet,” said Johnson.
“But one thing I’ve come to realise is that having HIV won’t stop me from realising my dreams of helping others. I hope by bringing attention to what happened to me, the Peace Corp will realise that too.”
HIV, peace corps. I found out I was HIV+ right before they made it policy to not let potential volunteers who are positive join the Corps.
This was in 1991. SEVENTEEN YEARS AGO.
The Peace Corps policy — because I was looking for every way around it before I tried to apply — is that you have to meet the placement country’s medical rules for entry as a volunteer.
There are only six countries in which Peace Corps operates that don’t require an HIV test for someone planning on migrating there. SIX.
Two of them are South Africa and Haiti. Peace Corps, sadly, may seem a bit mean-spirited, but they are actually in the right, given the way the rules are worded.