Rosemary Namubiru is a 64-year old
woman who also knows the distress of being HIV positive herself. She says that
she didn’t try to infect the baby, who turned out to be OK, but that it was a
mistake.
Throughout the trial, Namubiru
insisted that she was innocent. She says that she accidentally pricked herself
one day at work and wasn’t aware that she was using the same contaminated
needle to give an injection to a baby. But the child’s mother was watching the
situation closely and realized that the needle had not been changed. That’s
when she told authorities what happened.
The defendant had been denied bail
by a judge who felt that she was a danger to the public. Fortunately, the baby
is safe from harm.
Global Access Project, a New
York-based advocacy group, says that the ruling has a series of very serious
problems.
“The deeply flawed ruling shows that
stigma and discrimination against people with HIV is alive and well in Uganda,”
said Asia Russell, Director of Policy.
“Because of her HIV status,
Rosemary’s trial was plagued from the beginning with bias. Rosemary never had
the presumption of innocence the Constitution guarantees.”
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