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Kenyan wins landmark HIV ruling | Kenyan wins landmark HIV ruling |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A HIV-positive Kenyan woman has won $35,000 in a landmark ruling against her employer for unfair dismissal. | A HIV-positive Kenyan woman has won $35,000 in a landmark ruling against her employer for unfair dismissal. |
Jacqueline Adhiambo Ongur, a 45-year-old waitress, also sued her doctor for revealing her HIV status without her consent. | |
The High Court ruled that it was unlawful to end employment on the grounds of a person's HIV status. None of the defendants admitted liability. | The High Court ruled that it was unlawful to end employment on the grounds of a person's HIV status. None of the defendants admitted liability. |
About 2.5m out of 32m Kenyans are currently living with HIV/Aids. | About 2.5m out of 32m Kenyans are currently living with HIV/Aids. |
Mrs Ongur's former employer, Home Park Caterers, said the company had not requested a medical test, and was not aware of her status when she was sacked. | |
But the former waitress told the court that her letter of termination said she had been sacked on medical grounds, and for being unable to perform her duties. | But the former waitress told the court that her letter of termination said she had been sacked on medical grounds, and for being unable to perform her duties. |
The High Court's decision is the first such ruling in Kenya. | The High Court's decision is the first such ruling in Kenya. |
Victory | |
Mrs Ongur says she filed the case to focus attention on the rights of people living with HIV/Aids. | |
It's a message to employers that people living with HIV and Aids have got rights like any other person to work HIV/Aids activist Inviolata Mbwavi | |
She says she has endured hardship since she was sacked and has not been able to get another job. | |
Her lawyer said the case had been very challenging as Kenya's constitution does not expressly prohibit discrimination on grounds of HIV. | |
HIV/Aids activists have lauded the ruling saying it is a victory in the fight for the rights of people living with HIV/Aids. | |
"It's a lesson and a message to employers that people living with HIV and Aids have got rights like any other person to work," activist Inviolata Mbwavi told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme. | |
"It will bring up many people who have suffered at the hands of their insensitive employers to come out and know that the law protects them." | |
People living with the virus still face immense stigmatisation, Ms Mbwavi said. | |
'Invasion of privacy' | 'Invasion of privacy' |
Mrs Ongur told the court that when she went to hospital complaining of chest pains and rashes, Dr Primus Ochieng tested her for HIV without her consent. | |
She told the court that Dr Ochieng and the Metropolitan Hospital then disclosed her status without her consent to her employer, in breach of doctor-patient confidentiality. | She told the court that Dr Ochieng and the Metropolitan Hospital then disclosed her status without her consent to her employer, in breach of doctor-patient confidentiality. |
The court declared that testing employees or prospective employees for HIV without consent constituted an invasion of privacy and was unlawful. | The court declared that testing employees or prospective employees for HIV without consent constituted an invasion of privacy and was unlawful. |
Disclosing an employee's status to their employer without their consent was also unlawful, the court ruled. | Disclosing an employee's status to their employer without their consent was also unlawful, the court ruled. |
The former waitress said her employer and colleagues knew about her HIV status before she did. | The former waitress said her employer and colleagues knew about her HIV status before she did. |
She said that she only found out it when she went back to the hospital and requested her medical report. | She said that she only found out it when she went back to the hospital and requested her medical report. |
Mrs Ongur had worked for Home Park Caterers for eight years before she was dismissed. |