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![Howard said he would look at changing the law to stop HIV-positive people coming to Australia [AP] Howard said he would look at changing the law to stop HIV-positive people coming to Australia [AP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Global/a8/Howard-HIV.jpg) | | Howard said he would look at changing the law to stop HIV-positive people coming to Australia [AP] | John Howard, the Australian prime minister, has said people who are HIV-positive should not be allowed to migrate to Australia, a remark condemned by health groups as racist.
Howard told Southern Cross Broadcasting on Friday: "My initial reaction is no [they should not be allowed in]," adding that he would like more advice on the matter. Australia bans people with tuberculosis from entering the country as migrants, while people over the age of 15 who apply for permanent residence are tested for HIV. Applicants for residence who have a medical condition for which the lifetime treatment cost exceeds $17,000 are denied entry. "There may be some humanitarian considerations that could temper that in certain cases but prima facie, no." Howard said. He added he would look at changing the law to stop HIV-positive people coming to Australia. "I think we should have the most stringent possible conditions in relation to that nationwide and I know the health minister is concerned about that and is examining ways of tightening things up and I think people are entitled to be concerned." Condemned Aids experts attacked the comments as an overreaction. "It is already extremely difficult for people with HIV infection to be accepted as migrants or refugees," The Australian newspaper on Saturday quoted Don Baxter of the Australian Federation of Aids Organisations as saying. "Those people accepted, chiefly spouses and partners of Australian citizens, can and do contribute enormously to Australia's benefit." Others said the comments were discriminatory. "It's a hysterical overreaction, it mixes racism with a phobia about infectious disease," an infectious disease physician, Chris Lemoh, told the Australian Associated Press. "I think to not allow people to come on the basis of any health condition is immoral, it's unethical and it's impractical to enforce," Lemoh said. "Most of the people who acquire HIV acquire it here and most of them are born here."
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