The Global Network of Young People Living with HIV (Y+ Global) and its partners; African Girl
Child Development and Support Initiative, Global Network of People Living with HIV (GNP+),
and Frontline AIDS are concerned about multiple reports of young people being refused
Canadian visas to attend and participate at the AIDS 2022 conference.
The biennial conference this year takes place in Montreal, Canada, from 29th July – 2 nd August,
and will be the first in-person global gathering on AIDS since the onset of COVID-19, which has
seriously impacted the HIV response. Yet, young people living with, at risk of, and most affected
by HIV who have registered to attend the conference in-person, including those who have
received the International AIDS Society (IAS) scholarships, have had their visa applications
rejected.
One of the reasons provided includes a lack of evidence that the applicants will return to their
home country after the conference. All reports that Y+ Global has received so far are from young
people based in African and Latin American countries who need to complete complex, lengthy
and expensive visa application processes via poorly functioning online portals, presenting special
challenges for young people affected by the digital divide. A lack of visa application centers in
Burundi and Malawi also means that applicants from these countries must travel to Rwanda and
South Africa to submit their biometrics.
COVID-19 has impacted the HIV response and AIDS 2022 is a crucial moment to reshape and redouble efforts to end AIDS, particularly for young people from the African continent who are disproportionately impacted by HIV. It is imperative that they participate in the decisions affecting their health and futures.We strongly oppose the complex hurdles that young people living with, at risk of, and most affected by HIV have to jump through to attend a conference that directly impacts our health and lives and the undue scrutiny shown in the review process. I call on the Canadian government to simplify the application process and prioritize visas for young people to ensure our meaningful engagement and leadership at AIDS 2022.”Tinashe Rufurwadzo
Y+ Global Director of Programmes, Management, and Governance
The IAS must actively support young activists, particularly those from middle- and low-income countries to access travel visas to enable them to attend the conference in Montreal, Canada. We urge that decisions on conference venues acknowledge and consider the levels of scrutiny and barriers that communities of people living with and affected by HIV continuously face in our quest to represent in our own voices and lived experiences, and ask IAS to commit to hosting a greater number of future conferences in the countries most affected by HIV.”Florence Riako Anam
Programme Manager, Global Network of People Living with HIV (GNP+)