When Kato was called into his manager’s office, the Ugandan driver assumed he would be sent on an errand, not be ordered to take an HIV test and lose his job when it came back positive, leading him to sue his Chinese employer for unfair dismissal.
Kato is one of two HIV-positive workers who went to court last month to demand compensation from their former employer, China Communications Construction Co (CCCC), in Uganda’s second high-profile AIDS discrimination case in two years.
“[My manager] said: ‘If you don’t go for this test, you’ll be fired,’” said Kato, a 45-year-old father of three who declined to give his full name for fear of stigma.
“We had to go along with it because we were afraid of losing our jobs,” he said, describing how half a dozen employees were ferried to a clinic in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, to have their blood tested.
Uganda’s high court will hear the case on Aug. 16, in which the two plaintiffs are asking for 400 million Uganda shillings (US$110,000) in compensation, after efforts to reach an out-of-court settlement failed.
The day after his results came back in March last year, Kato said, his manager asked him to sign a resignation letter.
CCCC, one of the world’s largest businesses with a focus on infrastructure projects, denied the allegations.
“No employee has ever been coerced to take a medical checkup,” it said in court documents.
“Medical checkups undertaken by the plaintiffs, if at all, were not calculated to determine their employment, but for their own health benefit,” it said.
A lawyer for CCCC, which has three major road contracts with the Ugandan government, and a spokesman for the Uganda National Roads Authority declined to comment as the case is in court.
CCCC administration manager in Uganda Hao Yunfeng said in e-mailed comments that the company offers staff free, voluntary HIV tests.
The other plaintiff, a 27-year-old woman who asked to be identified as Alen, said she was fired after eight months cleaning at CCCC on a monthly salary of 300,000 Uganda shillings.
“You’re not supposed to treat people like that,” said Alen, who has been unable to find another full-time job since she was fired and struggles to support her six-month-old baby.
“For them, it’s as if HIV is like flu,” she said.
CCCC said in its court submissions that Alen stopped coming to work after being warned about her performance.
Both plaintiffs are also suing for infringement of the right to privacy, saying that the clinic shared their test results with their managers, not them.
Eight other employees said, in affidavits supporting Kato and Alen, that their managers also forced them to take HIV tests, which proved negative.
About 1.5 million of Uganda’s 40 million people are HIV positive and stigma is rife, with parliament in 2014 criminalizing intentional transmission of the disease.
Kato’s lawyer, Stephen Tumwesigye, said in e-mailed comments that the case highlights “glaring human rights violations that are perpetrated unabated” by Ugandan government contractors.
“We hope that in presenting this case before the court, many Ugandans will come out to report such violations,” he said.
A kitchen worker employed by China’s Sinohydro Corp, which is building a dam on the River Nile, lost an HIV discrimination case last year, when the Ugandan court ruled that its decision to transfer her to another department was legal.
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