Dubai Telegraph - HIV-positive Turkmen man fears deportation, torture

EUR -
AED 4.205987
AFN 73.296643
ALL 93.931577
AMD 420.617502
ANG 2.050487
AOA 1050.778484
ARS 1705.151301
AUD 1.650167
AWG 2.064341
AZN 1.941668
BAM 1.955434
BBD 2.305078
BDT 141.114171
BGN 1.936507
BHD 0.431519
BIF 3404.191768
BMD 1.145265
BND 1.47693
BOB 7.925446
BRL 5.948736
BSD 1.144491
BTN 109.031615
BWP 15.435972
BYN 3.320592
BYR 22447.201326
BZD 2.301769
CAD 1.626031
CDF 2572.265697
CHF 0.918915
CLF 0.02692
CLP 1059.4393
CNY 7.775325
CNH 7.767511
COP 3859.452688
CRC 521.400012
CUC 1.145265
CUP 30.349532
CVE 110.24434
CZK 24.190581
DJF 203.800028
DKK 7.474758
DOP 67.797591
DZD 152.376425
EGP 56.261621
ERN 17.178981
ETB 183.519805
FJD 2.588815
FKP 0.857122
GBP 0.857288
GEL 3.01773
GGP 0.857122
GHS 13.00145
GIP 0.857122
GMD 83.031332
GNF 10037.119013
GTQ 8.734401
GYD 239.393047
HKD 8.982757
HNL 30.632393
HRK 7.536762
HTG 149.692601
HUF 353.080165
IDR 20573.547174
ILS 3.433219
IMP 0.857122
INR 108.981678
IQD 1499.225586
IRR 1575827.890703
ISK 143.822563
JEP 0.857122
JMD 181.176047
JOD 0.812038
JPY 184.530902
KES 148.083216
KGS 100.150826
KHR 4583.101095
KMF 493.609403
KPW 1030.739237
KRW 1753.632346
KWD 0.355227
KYD 0.953813
KZT 541.233297
LAK 25841.931501
LBP 102485.499041
LKR 383.336488
LRD 207.719259
LSL 18.563602
LTL 3.381671
LVL 0.692759
LYD 7.335625
MAD 10.702694
MDL 20.131052
MGA 4852.048345
MKD 61.647131
MMK 2403.920577
MNT 4101.775509
MOP 9.245187
MRU 45.67544
MUR 53.885348
MVR 17.705712
MWK 1984.610749
MXN 19.977265
MYR 4.662377
MZN 73.193709
NAD 18.563602
NGN 1567.913885
NIO 42.112292
NOK 11.269738
NPR 174.45383
NZD 2.005176
OMR 0.440347
PAB 1.144476
PEN 3.894387
PGK 5.028058
PHP 70.380057
PKR 318.187282
PLN 4.284008
PYG 6958.695919
QAR 4.183716
RON 5.236036
RSD 117.37134
RUB 88.070179
RWF 1675.471382
SAR 4.296004
SBD 9.229168
SCR 16.00515
SDG 687.733355
SEK 11.031843
SGD 1.477759
SHP 0.855056
SLE 27.886847
SLL 24015.646452
SOS 654.083134
SRD 43.115833
STD 23704.680955
STN 24.495516
SVC 10.014123
SYP 126.588584
SZL 18.560684
THB 37.944963
TJS 10.609019
TMT 4.019881
TND 3.377767
TOP 2.757525
TRY 53.60392
TTD 7.756513
TWD 36.555156
TZS 3007.47028
UAH 50.971448
UGX 4177.23541
USD 1.145265
UYU 46.031374
UZS 13710.430623
VES 731.713792
VND 30115.898268
VUV 137.682583
WST 3.182185
XAF 655.828369
XAG 0.018367
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.095137
XCG 2.062622
XDR 0.815957
XOF 655.836957
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.485749
ZAR 18.561373
ZMK 10308.764232
ZMW 21.028876
ZWL 368.774983
  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

HIV-positive Turkmen man fears deportation, torture
HIV-positive Turkmen man fears deportation, torture / Photo: Natalia KOLESNIKOVA - AFP/File

HIV-positive Turkmen man fears deportation, torture

An HIV-positive gay man who fled Turkmenistan, one of the most repressive countries in the world, risks being deported, imprisoned and tortured, he and several non-governmental groups told AFP.

Text size:

Emir -- whose name has been changed for safety reasons -- fled the ex-Soviet Central Asian country in 2018 for fear of being persecuted for his homosexuality.

He then found a job in a territory in Europe that is not internationally recognised.

To avoid compromising his safety and that of his relatives back home, AFP has chosen to keep his exact location secret, but was able to interview him in person in July.

The 30-year-old said he tested positive for HIV in 2024.

He showed the results of medical lab tests, which AFP was able to authenticate, and said he had no access to antiviral treatment.

"My condition is getting worse. My body and stomach are hurting, I have pain under my ribs," he said.

"I can't sleep anymore, I sleep four or five hours, thinking about my health every day. I don't want to get AIDS," he added in a faint voice.

- Mortal threat -

Because of his HIV-positive status, Emir said he had been fired from his job in his current place of residence, lost his income, and now faces deportation to his home country.

In Turkmenistan, he said, he would be arrested: "Because of my illness, they will torture me, abuse me, and kill me."

Emir is unable to leave the place where he is now because he would have to first return to Turkmenistan to renew his passport, a photograph of which he provided to AFP.

Swiss nonprofit Life4me+ sent him six months of antiviral treatment before stopping it due to the exhaustion of their "remaining medication stocks," the organisation's president, Alex Schneider said.

Emir then received a few irregular shipments of medication, but for almost four months now he has been without medication.

On three occasions, the health authorities in the territory where he is based have refused to provide him with treatment.

A local LGBTQ rights group said it was currently unable to provide Emir with the necessary medication for financial and legal reasons.

In an email to AFP, it said it had helped find Emir a psychologist who diagnosed him with "severe anxiety and depression symptoms with thoughts of suicide".

- 'Place forgotten by God' -

In Turkmenistan, homosexuality is punishable by jail under the criminal code provision prohibiting "sodomy".

HIV-positive people, instead of receiving treatment, regularly find themselves imprisoned and tortured, according to several human rights groups.

The nonprofits and exiled independent media reported waves of arrests targeting LGBTQ people several times in recent years.

People detained as part of the repressions have been reported to disappear into the prison system and held incommunicado.

Turkmenistan -- a gas-rich desert country rich officially home to seven million people -- is considered one of the most reclusive in the world.

Internet access is severely limited, and no independent nonprofits are allowed to operate there.

"It's a place forgotten by God where people suffer terrible things," said Evi Chayka, founder of EQUAL PostOst, a rights group helping LGBTQ people who are victims of repression in the former communist bloc.

According to reliable sources familiar with the situation on the ground, speaking on condition of anonymity, the unrecognised territory where Emir is located does not have a "formal asylum framework" which prevents him from being taken into care by international bodies.

Stuck in the maze, the young man said he still hopes that someone will find a way to help him.

Even if, he added, "thousands of other people are suffering" throughout the world.

Y.Al-Shehhi--DT