KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 13 — The government wants to draft a new regulation in an effort to eliminate discrimination against people living with HIV or AIDS at the workplace, said  Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri Dr Richard Riot Jaem.

In this respect, he said the ministry planned to make a holistic review on all its existing acts before coming out with a draft and bringing it to the Attorney-General’s Chambers, before proceeding to the next step.

However, he said, there was no definite timeline yet as to when the draft would be ready.

“But of course engagement (with all the key players) is very important in this,” he told reporters when met after delivering his speech at the Malaysian Business Consortium on HIV/AIDS Forum 2017 here today.

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Earlier in his speech, Riot explained that currently companies in the country were only guided by non-compulsory ‘Code of Practice on Prevention and Management of HIV and AIDS’ developed by the Department of Occupational Safety and Health in 2001, which supports the creation of a non-judgemental and non-discriminatory work environment

“What we have now is only a guidance, voluntary basis. So what we intend to do is we will try to make it an obligatory,” he said adding that since its introduction, only 42 companies had adopted it.

Riot expressed his concern that although AIDS related death had stabilised in the past decade and led to a significant improvement in the quality of life of people living with HIV in this country, those inflicted continued to be affected by attitudes, practices, and policies that stigmatised against them at the workplace.

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“We must not forget AIDS and HIV cannot be passed from a person unless you have contact, unlike other diseases where it is airborne,” he added. — Bernama