Sri Lankan School Empties Amid Aids Rumours: BBC

February 29, 2016

A school in western Sri Lanka has been emptied of all but one pupil amid false rumours that the boy has Aids.

Parents removed their children from the Kurunegela school last week, despite the six-year-old having a certificate proving he does not have the disease.

His mother said many other schools had rejected him because her husband's death had been wrongly blamed on Aids.

School officials told the BBC's Sinhala service they would try to hold a session to educate parents.

Chandani De Soysa said she had been trying for some time to find a school place, but "they didn't take my child because of this Aids fear".

"I protested and nothing happened, even I found it difficult to get any work."

Low HIV awareness

After her case was reported by BBC Sinhala earlier this month, the educational and human rights authorities became involved, and last week one school was ordered to take in the child.

Despite both her and her son holding certificates showing they are not infected, parents immediately began pressuring her to remove him, but she refused.

"He went to the class and played with other kids, but then suddenly all the parents came and took their children away," she told the BBC.

His class teacher, who stayed with him at school, said she felt "very sad when the child asked me why all my friends are leaving because of me, and why the police and others here".

She said even though other children had treated him normally, "I am not sure how the children will react even when they come back".

The regional education director, Saman Wijesekara, said parents of all 186 pupils had formally asked to stop attending the school.

"We are thinking of having an educational session to parents to solve this issue," he said.

Sri Lanka is considered to have a very low prevalence of HIV, the virus that causes Aids.

According to UN figures, in 2014 there were 3,200 adults and 100 children living with HIV, less than 0.1% of the population.

But there is also concern about poor awareness of the virus and how it spreads, which leads to stigma and discrimination.

(BBC)