MEXICO CITY, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) -- Guatemala's HIV  infection rate is 0.8 percent of the population, and the country has  seen 10,900 new HIV infections in the last four years, a senior Health  Ministry official said Wednesday.
A total of 22,260 HIV infections have been registered since the first  case was detected in 1984, and more than half have been contracted  since 2006, Claudia Samayoa, coordinator of the Guatemalan Health  Ministry's national AIDS program, said after Guatemala signed an  agreement to receive 4 million U.S. dollars in anti-HIV assistance from  the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
About 95 percent of the cases were sexually transmitted, and among  high risk groups such as homosexuals and sex workers, infection rates  were closer to 5 percent, Samayoa told reporters at the signing  ceremony, one of the nation's events to mark International AIDS Day.
USAID project officer Lucrecia Castillo noted that some of the  increase comes from better testing, as in the past, many people did not  know they were infected.
Castillo warned that homophobia is an obstacle in fighting the spread  of the disease, as "communities that identify as homosexual are being  reached, but not those who do not wish to be identified."
The United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS says that Belize has the  highest HIV prevalence rate in Central America, at 2.3 percent. Panama  is in second place with 0.9 percent, and Guatemala and El Salvador are  tied for third place with 0.8 percent.
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