Pope Says Condoms Won't Solve AIDS

March 18, 2009
YAOUNDE, Cameroon (March 18)
- Pope Benedict XVI said condoms are not the answer to the
AIDS epidemic in Africa and can make the problem worse, setting
off criticism Tuesday as he began a weeklong trip to the continent
where some 22 million people are living with HIV.
Benedict's first statement on an issue that has divided even
Catholic clergy working with AIDS patients came hours before
he arrived in Cameroon's capital — greeted by thousands
of flag-waving faithful who stood shoulder-to-shoulder in
red dirt fields and jammed downtown streets for a glimpse
of the pontiff's motorcade.
In his four years as pope,
Benedict had never directly addressed condom use, although
his position is not new. His predecessor, Pope John Paul II,
often said that sexual abstinence — not condoms —
was the best way to prevent the spread of the disease.
Benedict also said the Roman Catholic Church was at the forefront
of the battle against AIDS.
"You can't resolve it with the distribution of condoms,"
the pope told reporters aboard the Alitalia plane heading
to Yaounde. "On the contrary, it increases the problem."
The pope said a responsible and moral attitude toward sex
would help fight the disease, as he answered questions submitted
in advance by reporters traveling on the plane. His response
was presumably also prepared in advance.
The Catholic Church rejects the use of condoms as part of
its overall teaching against artificial contraception. Senior
Vatican officials have advocated fidelity in marriage and
abstinence from premarital sex as key weapons in the fight
against AIDS.
The late Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo made headlines in
2003 for saying that condoms may help spread AIDS through
a false sense of security, claiming they weren't effective
in blocking transmission of the virus. The cardinal, who died
last year, headed the Vatican's Pontifical Council for the
Family.
Three-quarters of all AIDS deaths worldwide in 2007 were in
sub-Saharan Africa, where some 22 million people are infected
with HIV — accounting for two-thirds of the world's
infections, according to UNAIDS.
Rebecca Hodes with the Treatment Action Campaign in South
Africa said if the pope is serious about preventing HIV infections,
he should focus on promoting wide access to condoms and spreading
information on how to use them.
"Instead, his opposition to condoms conveys that religious
dogma is more important to him than the lives of Africans,"
said Hodes, head of policy, communication and research for
the group.
Hodes said the pope was right that condoms are not the sole
solution to Africa's AIDS epidemic, but added they are one
of the very few proven measures to prevent HIV infections.
Even some priests and nuns working with those infected with
the AIDS virus question the church's opposition to condoms
amid the pandemic ravaging Africa. Ordinary Africans do as
well.
"Talking about the nonuse of condoms is out of place.
We need condoms to protect ourselves against diseases and
AIDS," teacher Narcisse Takou said in Yaounde.
Stanley Obale Okpu, a civil servant working in the ministry
of urban development in Cameroon, said: "What the pope
says is an ideal for the Catholic church. But he needs to
look at the realities on the ground. One should be aware of
these realities. In the case of Cameroon — and Africa
as a whole — condoms are very necessary ... You need
condoms to prevent AIDS and birth control."
A crowd of photographers and cameras flashed as the 81-year-old
pontiff stepped off the plane into the steaming 88-degree
heat, with humidity levels measuring a wilting 90 percent.
It was the first stop on a weeklong pilgrimage that will also
take Benedict to Angola as he seeks to draw international
attention to Africa's problems of famine, poverty and armed
conflict.
The pope was greeted by Cameroon's President Paul Biya, who
has ruled since 1982 and whose government has been accused
by Amnesty International of abuses in crushing political opponents.
The pope made no specific reference to the situation in Cameroon,
but he did say in general remarks on Africa that "a Christian
can never remain silent" in the face of violence, poverty,
hunger, corruption or abuse of power.
"The saving message of the Gospel needs to be proclaimed
loud and clear so that the light of Christ can shine into
the darkness of people's lives," Benedict said as the
president and other political leaders looked on.
Africa is the fastest-growing region for the Catholic church,
though it competes with Islam and evangelical churches.
The pope said Tuesday he intends to make an appeal for "international
solidarity" for Africa in the face of the global economic
downturn. He said while the church does not propose specific
economic solutions, it can give "spiritual and moral"
suggestions.
He described the current crisis as the result of "a deficit
of ethics in economic structures."
"It is here that the church can make a contribution,"
he said.
On the plane, Benedict also dismissed the notion that he was
facing increasing opposition and isolation within the church,
particularly after an outreach to ultraconservatives that
led to his lifting the excommunication of a Holocaust-denying
bishop.
"The myth of my solitude makes me laugh," the pope
said, adding that he has a network of friends and aides whom
he sees every day.