BEIJING, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- China has started
revising the current laws and regulations that ban HIV carriers from entering
the country, health ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an said on Monday.
At a press briefing in Beijing, he said it took time
for China to learn about AIDS. When the country had no idea how HIV/AIDS was
transmitted, China issued laws that restricted the entry of HIV carriers.
"According to the transmissive means of HIV/AIDS and
our current evaluation on the harmfulness of HIV carriers, we have set to revise
laws and regulations that ban HIV carriers' entry into the country," Mao said.
But he didn't say how the laws would be revised.
China issued Law on Control of the Entry and Exit of
Aliens in 1985, regulating that foreigners with infectious diseases such as
leprosy, HIV/AIDS and venereal disease were not allowed to enter the country.
Mao admitted that the number of HIV/AIDS cases had
increased in China, but he said it did not mean that the situation was getting
worse as the rise may have resulted from a strengthened surveillance of the
disease in recent years.
China had 183,733 officially reported HIV/AIDS cases
in 2006 but experts from the Ministry of Health estimated there were more likely
650,000 people living with the disease.