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17th December 2016
05:02pm GMT

''Suddenly all my fears about being HIV-positive and being rejected that I hadn’t experienced became realised,” Alex told Buzzfeed. “And this wasn’t by a person, this was by a national broadcaster. The thing that kept shocking me was [thinking], This is Channel 4, they tout themselves as the progressive channel, as the pioneering channel. But now Channel 4’s legal team had deemed me too much of a risk to my date.”HIV is covered by the Equality Act 2010, meaning that it is discriminatory to force someone to disclose their HIV status against their will. When the production team refused to back down Alex told them he would not go on the show. Once they heard this, Alex said their tone changed and, after speaking to their legal team, they agreed that he could go on the show without revealing his status. He appeared in an episode that aired in April this year, but he and his date didn't hit it off. A spokesperson for Channel 4 responded to the claims saying: ‘The welfare and privacy of all our contributors is of paramount importance. Anyone who has disclosed their HIV status on the programme has done so through personal choice and not at the request of the production team.’
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