France to lift ban on gay men giving blood: Minister

AFP
November 4, 2015 11:05 MYT
A file photo of a person donating blood. France will be lifting a ban on gay men donating blood after justifying that the donor's sexual orientation cannot be a condition.
France will lift a ban on gay men donating blood, introduced in the 1980s to prevent the spread of AIDS but heavily criticised by rights groups, the health minister said Wednesday.
"Giving blood is an act of generosity, of civic responsibility, and the donor's sexual orientation cannot be a condition," Marisol Touraine announced in Paris.
"While respecting patient safety, today we are lifting a taboo," she said.
Touraine said the lifting of the ban, promised by Francois Hollande in his presidential campaign, will happen piecemeal, starting next year.
At first, donation will be open to gay men who had not been sexually active for the preceding 12 months, she specified.
In other countries with similar exclusionary provisions for potential donors, including Australia, Britain, Japan and Sweden, rights groups criticise the measures as discriminatory.
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