In India, 2.1 million people are still infected with HIV according to the United Nations, although the rate of infection is falling but still we are in danger zone. A global charity has launched a free condom store in India; an initiative to reduce new cases of HIV/AIDS in a country with the world’s third highest number of cases.

www.nepalipatra.com

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) said the initiative was the first of its kind. Now people will be able to place orders by phone or through email to get a supply delivered to their doorstep by-passing all the social taboos and quality issues.

According to many past surveys in spite of condoms being dirt cheap, sex workers and other vulnerable groups hesitate to purchase them from stores because of deep-seated social taboos.

The government in past have tried distributing condoms for free through its health centres but it was very successful, according to the activists the stock provided by the government are often inaccessible or of bad quality.

funny-24.com

"The funding for condoms is bad, it's being cut around the world. We were getting desperate requests and it's then we realised India needs its own condom store," said Terri Ford, chief of global advocacy and policy at AHF.

"Condoms are the cheapest and the best way to prevent HIV infection so we were very upset about it (funding cuts)," she told AFP.

India's AIDS programme has largely been successful but in 2014 the central government cut its share of funding, leading to a shortage of condoms and anti-retroviral drugs. The government later restored the funding but vulnerable communities continue to be at risk of infection, as well as facing a stigma in a largely conservative society.

Last month parliament passed the HIV/AIDS (Prevention and Control) bill, 15 years after it was introduced in the legislature, to safeguard the rights of sufferers and protect them from discrimination.

apester.com

"Imagine, one bill was on the table for 15 years," said Ford. "We feel very frustrated. We work with governments all over the world but there's nothing like Indian bureaucracy.

"Slow bureaucracy is actually killing people. So many people are dying because of lack of timely testing and treatment," Ford said.

"India wants to be a global player in the world economy but if you can't even ensure basic healthcare to your people you can't become one."