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Qatar’s World Cup promises fun — but without pleasure .
Fans traveling to watch the global soccer championship have been warned not to bring a number of items that are reportedly banned in Qatar, the site of 2022’s World Cup. Those caught with any one of the verboten items could face prison time, according to an official memo.
“Importing drugs, alcohol, pornography, pork products and religious books and material into Qatar is illegal,” reads the UK Foreign Travel Advice government website .
Beer, it is noted, will be served at designated locations , including inside stadiums during games, but prohibited elsewhere.
“Swearing and making rude gestures are considered obscene acts and offenders can be jailed and/or deported,” the site continues. “Take particular care when dealing with the police and other officials.”
The site goes on to list several cautions for visitors, such as refraining from public displays of intimacy, and it offers advice on how to dress according to Islamic code.
“You should dress modestly when in public, including while driving. Women must cover their shoulders and avoid wearing short skirts,” instructs the website.
“Both men and women are advised not to wear shorts or sleeveless tops, when going to government buildings, health-care facilities or malls.”
The list of banned items makes headlines as controversy continues to swirl around the decision to make Qatar the host country of the World Cup. The tournament, which historically takes place every four years between May, June and July, had to be shifted to November 2022 due to Qatar’s punishingly hot climate.
Besides the harsh playing conditions, fans have also criticized the Persian Gulf state’s stance on homosexuality and human rights, accusing organizers of putting profit over people. Just days ago, a Qatar World Cup ambassador told German television network ZDF that homosexuality is “damage in the mind.”
Ex-FIFA president Joseph “Sepp” Blatter commented that picking Qatar as host country had been a “mistake.”
“It was a bad choice. And I was responsible for that as president at the time,” said Blatter.
The 2022 World Cup kicks off Sunday, Nov. 20, 2022.

Health | Bringing Sexy Back — To Fight H.I.V.
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Bringing Sexy Back — To Fight H.I.V.
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The Fight Against H.I.V. An estimated 40 million people are living with H.I.V. worldwide. About 10 million of them do not have access to treatment. A New Shot : An injection every two months rather than a daily pill could shield many more women from H.I.V. , but the shot is unavailable in places that need it most. Pandemic Setbacks : Before Covid-19, the world had been making strides against global illnesses like H.I.V. The pandemic has changed that for the worse . A Visionary : Ravindra Gupta led the efforts that resulted in the second case of a patient being cured of H.I.V. Then he was drawn into Covid research . A Promising Treatment: In February, researchers announced that a woman became the third person ever to be cured of H.I.V. thanks to a new transplant method that could help more people from racially diverse backgrounds.
Most safer sex campaigns focus on danger and disease. Acknowledging the importance of pleasure — and how to make safe sex good sex — could make them more effective.
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Efforts to make sex safer almost always focus on the bad stuff: what to do to avoid a terrible infection or potentially deadly virus. They rarely acknowledge the good stuff: usually the reason people have sex in the first place.
And that’s why safe sex campaigns throughout the world aren’t as effective as they could be.
Research shows that when safe sex campaigns acknowledge pleasure — by talking about sex as something that makes life good, or showing how condoms can be erotic — more people use a condom the next time they have sex.
That is what the World Health Organization and a small nongovernmental organization called the Pleasure Project found when they reviewed the results of safer-sex trials and experiments over the past 15 years. They assessed more than 7,000 interventions for their treatment of pleasure (and lack thereof). The peer-reviewed findings were published in the journal PLOS One.
“Sexual health education and services have traditionally promoted safer sex practices by focusing on risk reduction and preventing disease, without acknowledging how safer sex can also promote intimacy, pleasure, consent and well-being,” said Lianne Gonsalves, a co-author of the paper and an epidemiologist who researches sexual health with the W.H.O. “This review provides a simple message: Programs which better reflect the reasons people have sex, including for pleasure, see better health outcomes.”
The stakes are high. Sexually transmitted infections are at record levels in the United States and rising around the world since Covid-19 pandemic closures set back testing and treatment. Globally, 1.5 million people were diagnosed with H.I.V. in 2021, a rate of new infections that has hardly budged in the last four years. Taking a daily pill known as PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, offers the promise of preventing some infections, but condoms remain a simple and surefire way to do it.
The Pleasure Project has for years maintained that recognizing the role of pleasure would have a major impact on condom use, reducing not only sexually transmitted infections but also unwanted pregnancies. Still, Anne Philpott, a British public health specialist who founded the initiative in 2004, said the strength of the results of the analysis came as a surprise even to her.
“If you had a pill or a vaccine where you could show this kind of effect, everybody would be talking about it, it would have all the headlines,” she said. “Now we have evidence: Ignoring this blind spot, all the way through the AIDS pandemic, has led to less condom use, and deaths we could have prevented.”
The good news, she noted, is that the pleasure message is a comparatively cheap and easy addition for programs. It’s a change in conversation, rather than a new drug or device that needs regulatory approval and infrastructure to be delivered to far-flung places.
I’ve been crossing paths with Ms. Philpott at global gatherings on AIDS for nearly two decades. But her message is only slowly taking root in the vast sexual and reproductive health community that delivers safer-sex messages and technologies in much of the world.
There is some progress. In September, the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the largest sexual and reproductive health organization in the world, endorsed what are called the Pleasure Principles, guidelines for centering enjoyment in healthy sex . It was the first move by a global sexual health organization to embrace the P-word explicitly in delivering its services.
And there are scattered programs around the world taking this approach — projects such as Phénix, in Montreal, which taught “erotic skills” to men who have sex with men, using videos that made condoms sexy and fun.
The best demonstration of the pleasure message I’ve seen comes from Arushi Singh, who is co-director of the Pleasure Project. When she demonstrates what it means to eroticize safer sex, she pulls a little blue pouch out of her bag .
“This is a sex toy I was introduced to by sex workers at an AIDS conference in Bangkok,” she says in the tone of a friend with a delightful discovery to share.
“It’s small, convenient, you can carry it in your bag, insert it by yourself, or your partner can help,” she explains. “It’s nicely lubricated. It comes with two rings — one anchors against the cervix. And this outer ring is the secret: When a penis or a dildo goes into your vagina, the outer ring is pressing against the clitoris.”
She gives a little shimmy. “That’s what does it.”
The toy Ms. Singh is demonstrating is, in fact, a female condom. And that, she says, is how you flip the narrative and make a conversation about disease prevention first about having a good time.
So why, given the millions of dollars spent globally every year to change how people have sex, is the actual point of sex mostly left off the agenda?
Ms. Philpott has a theory. “People who work in sexual health often come from a biomedical background, and they focus on death, danger and disease,” she said. “They’re not encouraged to think of themselves as sexual beings.”
The fact that most sexual and reproductive health programs are delivered by big aid agencies doesn’t help, she added. “There’s an international development narrative that historically comes from a very sex-negative place or a Christian colonial perspective aimed at saving the ‘poor unfortunates.’”
Sonali Silva, who until recently did advocacy work for the Pleasure Project in Sri Lanka, told me that during the years she worked on sexual health-related issues, including abortion rights and H.I.V., with big international organizations such as the W.H.O., she kept running into the same phenomenon.
“The big elephant in the room that nobody wants to make eye contact with is why people have sex in the first place,” she said. “We’re all just going to act like it’s only for reproduction. As long as people have been alive, they’ve been having sex for pleasure, but the world of international development is not having that conversation.”
The prudish resistance may be a colonial import, she said, but it’s entrenched. She encounters the same reluctance from Sri Lankans. When she pushed for the seventh-grade health curriculum in Sri Lanka to say more about masturbation than that it is not a mental illness, she was called to appear before a parliamentary committee.
“I really saw how forceful the resistance is,” she said, to the idea that people have a “right to pleasure.”
Mahmoud Garga, who leads strategic communications in the Africa office of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, recently launched a social media campaign called “Treasure Your Pleasure,” which I love. It was designed for East Africa, but he and his colleagues have been asked to expand it to Southeast Asia.
The campaign features words for orgasm in different African languages, emphasizing that pleasure is not an imported idea .
“We want to debunk that myth that sexual pleasure is a Western theme that is pushed on other cultures,” Mr. Garga said. “It’s simply not true. I’m Egyptian, so I’m familiar with Arab literature, and there was just this history of erotic poetry.”
Mr. Garga told me that the topic was never part of sexual health education when he was growing up in Egypt, and that even in progressive environments like Planned Parenthood, sexual health typically means “contraception, sexually transmitted infections, and unwanted pregnancies, going to clinics and consulting with doctors. That, I mean, I don’t find that sexy at all.”
“But when you shift the narrative from that fear-based framing,” he continued, “when you talk about sexual pleasure as a big component of sex and your sex life, then you turn it into something that needs to be talked about.”
“Using a condom frees up your mind to feel pleasure.”


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