Forgot your password? Create an account
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

The Botswana Gazette

Thursday
Sep 09th
Home News Letters Why Botswana Needs an HIV Employment Law, Not a Policy
Why Botswana Needs an HIV Employment Law, Not a Policy PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 18 March 2008 19:00
BONELA is disturbed by reports that job seekers are tested for HIV/AIDS without their knowledge. BONELA is against such workplace practices. Last week the Assistant Minister of Labour and Home Affairs, Honourable

 Gaotlhaetse Matlhabaphiri, is quoted as saying, “Through the mediation service of the Department of Labour and Social Security, I have become aware of employment related HIV testing by some employers. As there is a policy gap on this matter, preparations for a policy decision are at an advanced stage. In the meantime, I wish to encourage all employers, including the diamond polishing and cutting companies to desist from this practice.”  
While we acknowledge that the Assistant Minister was candid in his answers, we note that a ‘policy’ will not resolve the issue of unwarranted and unjustifiable ‘Post and Pre - employment testing for HIV’. This is so because a policy is not a legally binding instrument and its use is dependant upon the discretion of the employer. The only practical remedy for such workplace practices is, and remains the enactment of a law that will promote and protect the rights of those infected and affected by HIV in the workplace.
Countries like Zimbabwe, Namibia and Angola have long passed such laws to avoid this rampant HIV related discrimination in the workplace. BONELA has through its ongoing HIV Employment Law Campaign called on Parliament to emulate such countries and enact a law that is concrete and realistic, as opposed to a policy which is just a guideline and idealistic in its nature.   
BONELA is an NGO based in Gaborone that promotes a just and inclusive environment for people affected by HIV and AIDS through education, training community members, advocating for better policies and laws, raising public awareness through media campaigns, monitoring human rights violations, researching key issues and providing free legal aid.       
Last Updated on Wednesday, 26 March 2008 17:11
 

Home Adverts






Weather