TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Health officials want
to turn the scantily clad women who sell betel nuts at stands
along Taiwan's roadways into anti-AIDS campaigners.
Betel nuts, chewed as a mild stimulant, are
popular among truck and taxi drivers - and vendors often compete
by staffing roadside sales booths with young women in bikinis,
translucent blouses or nurse's uniforms with miniskirts.
The government plans to have the women give
their customers boxes containing condoms and an AIDS warning,
Yang Shih-yang, an official at the Center for Disease Control,
said Saturday.
"Research done from Africa to Himalayan
countries has proved one thing: The AIDS viruses are spread
along the highways," Yang said. He was apparently referring to
truckers and cab drivers engaging in prostitution or sex with
multiple partners.
However, Yang said the plan is still under study
because authorities do not want the act to accidentally promote
the sale and chewing of betel nuts - which many physicians say
could cause cancer.
In recent years, the provocatively dressed
roadside saleswomen called "betel nut girls" have become part of
Taiwanese culture.
Several of the saleswomen, interviewed recently
by Sanli Cable News, dismissed the anti-AIDS proposal as too
sexually suggestive, and said it could expose them to risk of
assault.
The plan "might give people wild thoughts," said
one, whose name was not given.
Officials say AIDS cases have been rising by
about 3,000 a year in Taiwan, a large island off southern China
with 23 million people.
In an attempt to contain the spread of the HIV
virus, authorities recently began a program under which
convenience stores distribute free needles for drug addicts.