2010年2月20日星期六

【China AIDS:5146】 Heartache of the Aids whistle-blower forced to live in exile (SCMP)


SCMP.com


Heartache of the Aids whistle-blower forced to live in exile
Minnie Chan
Updated on Feb 19, 2010
Over the past six months, 82-year-old Dr Gao Yaojie has often woken up in tears,
only to find herself in a cosy Texas bedroom.

In her dreams, she can reach home by crossing a river. But when she wakes up,
she is separated from her Henan home by an ocean and the central government's
suppression of her campaign to speak up for mainland Aids patients.

Gao, the mainland's most high-profile HIV/Aids whistle-blower, said she was
forced into exile in August in order to carry on documenting the plight of
mainland Aids patients and the scandal of disease transmission through blood
sales and transfusions. She faced constant harassment from the authorities for
insisting that blood remained the most important means of transmission on the
mainland, not sexual contact as claimed by the government.

Gao is now living with a Chinese family in an undisclosed location in Texas. But
the more care they show to her, the more heartbroken she is as it reminds her
that her only son has blamed her for causing trouble for the family.

"I feel secure and comfortable here, but my son did not treat me that way," she
tells RTHK in a documentary that will be broadcast tomorrow. "I travelled to the
US alone as I was homeless in my country. All my children have their own
families ... none of them supports me."

Every day, the small, frail doctor is taken to a study provided by a nearby
church so that she can write. It is quiet, clean and safe compared to her home,
where she was constantly under surveillance.

She has published a first book and almost finished a second. But she has paid a
heavy price for bringing the stories of hundreds of Aids patients to light. She
may never be able to go home to the old flat in a compound in Zhengzhou that she
shared with her late husband for many years.

The only comfort may be in her dreams, where she crosses a river easily to pick
up the photos of patients she left behind. They are the pictures of HIV/Aids
patients and orphans she visited in Henan, Sichuan, Guangxi, Guangdong and other
places over the past 16 years.

"I cry every morning when I wake up as I miss all the HIV patients and orphans
in China very much," she said. "I look on them as my own children ... but they
live like little livestock. None of them was treated like a human being at all."

Gao managed to take some pictures to the US, with the help of villagers in
Guangzhou.

Before she finally made up her mind to leave for the US, the retired
gynaecologist hid in a small village for six months as she tried to organise the
stories of the Aids patients and compile them into books.

She was both touched and surprised by the help offered by many sympathisers she
did not know before, as it showed the depth of their dissatisfaction with the
government.

"In the village on the outskirts of Guangzhou there were a lot of local people
helping me to typewrite and file my articles and data," she said. "Those people
helped me because they are dissatisfied with our society, but none of them dare
to speak out."

When she decided the risks of staying in China were too high and it was time to
leave, her sympathisers helped her to scan hundreds of photos and transfer them
onto CDs. They provide the key information for her books.

She has collected a great deal of evidence, including documents and photos,
linking blood sales to the spread of HIV on the mainland.

"I plan to write three books in the first two years in the US," she said. "I
want to use my books to let all the people realise blood sales are the key
channel [of HIV transmission]. Otherwise, nobody will know the facts after I
die."

Her first book, China's Aids Plague: 10,000 Letters, was published in December.
Gao tells RTHK that her second book, about Aids orphans and child victims, will
go on sale in Taiwan later this year.

The Chinese version of Gao's interview will be broadcast at 7pm tomorrow on TVB
Jade Channel, while the English version will screen at 6.55pm next Friday on ATV
World.

       Copyright © 2010 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All right reserved



--
Sara L.M. Davis, Ph.D. ("Meg")
Executive Director
Asia Catalyst
P.O. Box 20839
New York, NY 10009
Tel: +1-718-514-2855
www.asiacatalyst.org
www.yazhoudiaocha.com
www.songandsilence.com

--
★杯葛比尔与梅林达盖茨基金会在中国 Boycott Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in China https://sites.google.com/site/boycottgatesfoundation/
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~----~----------~----~----~----~------~----
“China AIDS Group中国艾滋病网络 论坛”
A:要在此论坛发帖,请发电子邮件到 chinaaidsgroup@googlegroups.com
B:要退订此论坛,请发邮件至 chinaaidsgroup-unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
C:Contact us: chinaaidsgroup@gmail.com
 
★中国艾滋病博物馆/China AIDS Museum: http://www.AIDSmuseum.cn
旗下网站:
——艾博维客 AIDS Wiki : http://www.AIDSwiki.org
——艾博聚合(艾滋病博客群
http://www.wanyanhai.org
——中国艾滋病网络( Email Group with over 2400 members):http://www.ChinaAIDSgroup.orghttp://chinaaidsgroup.blogspot.com
——中国艾滋病地图/China AIDS Map:http://www.AIDSmaps.org
——空腹健身运动:http://www.HungerStrikeforAIDS.org
——艾滋人权 AIDS Rights: http://www.AIDSrights.net
——常坤:为艾滋病防治努力一生:Http://www.changkun.org
 
★ 凡是挑�、��、非理性、�於情�性、胡�批�和�意�之言�,或是匿名人士之言�,以及所�表意�出�有不雅、粗鄙之文字等,本�件��不予以�示!

没有评论:

发表评论