Giving Compass' Take:

• India is taking a step in the right direction with the legalization of gay sex and in effect, people will be at less risk from HIV and AIDs in the LGBT community. 

• How can this legalization inspire other countries to follow suit? What role can funders play in supporting this cause?

• Here's an article on how philanthropists can ensure the gay communities future. 


NEW DELHI, Feb. 7 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — No longer shamed as criminals, millions of LGBT people in India will be less at risk from HIV/AIDS following the legalisation of gay sex, the head of a global health fund said on Thursday.

Many gay and transgender people say they encounter discrimination and stigma during health check ups, leading some to avoid doctors' visits altogether, in the largely conservative society where homosexuality has long been taboo.

India has the world's third largest population living with HIV — 2.1 million people — and prevalence rates among gay men — at 2.7% — are 10 times that of the total adult population, according to the United Nations agency UNAIDS.

"Criminalisation of communities ... demonstrably increases their vulnerability to diseases like HIV because it creates barriers to accessing health services," said Peter Sands, head of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Read the full article about India's gay sex ruling by Annie Banerji at Global Citizen.