Africa at the Forefront of AIDS War After 30 Years
AFP
May 29, 2011
Africa
Home to 22.5 million
people with HIV -- nearly 70 percent of the world's total --
sub-Saharan Africa bears the brunt of the 30-year-old AIDS pandemic.
Millions of lives have been
destroyed, yet the war now shows signs of progress: infection rates are
stabilising or dropping in many countries as access to life-saving
drugs widens.
But the challenges are huge.
From Kampala to Mbabane,
the following are short reports on the key issues from five AFP bureaux.
ACCESS TO DRUGS
LAGOS - Microphone in hand,
the receptionist calls over the public address system to the next
person waiting to grasp a lifeline: the precious drugs that will keep
the deadly AIDS virus at bay.
The Nigeria Institute of
Medical Research, located in the working-class suburb of Yaba, is often
overwhelmed by the numbers. Hundreds queue daily at the clinic, and
hours can pass in the waiting room.
The drugs are free, as in
many African countries, but just 360,000 people receive treatment --
about one third of the Nigerians who need it.
The health system struggles
to expand treatment and ensure people take their pills in the face of
sharp social stigma. Then there are simple practicalities for the poor,
like paying for transport to fetch the drugs.
"You don't really think
about it, but just coming here is a very great task. I have to wake up
very early, like today I woke up at 4:00 am -- and I spend between five
and six hours" at the clinic, said a 42-year-old woman, one of
Nigeria's 3.1 million people with HIV.
She has been on treatment
for nine years, since a time when such medicines were rare.
Even so, treatment has
transformed the pandemic from a looming death sentence into a chronic
manageable disease.
"Thank God the drugs work,"
she said.
SAFE SEX
KAMPALA - After six years
of campaigning about safe sex in a Kampala suburb, Kenneth Mukwaya
worries Ugandans are suffering from AIDS fatigue.
Uganda has been hailed as
one of Africa's successes in the fight against AIDS, with infections
slashed from 18 percent in 1992 to 6.1 percent in 2002.
But in recent years, the
decline has stagnated, even rising slightly to around 6.5 percent.
"Before, we were focusing
on the youth by going to schools, talking to young people and they
really picked it up. Now we are trying to reach older people and
married couples," said the 26-year-old.
"Although Uganda has had a
lot of success against AIDS, the fight is still on and it's now the
older groups that are being more affected."
Around 43 percent of new
infections come from people in long-term relationships, with doctors
pointing to a rise in risky behaviour among older people and married
couples.
Now, a series of campaigns
targets the older generations and urges couples to get tested together
and to avoid extramarital affairs.
"With time people became
complacent. The people started taking the information for granted and
levels started rising again," said Tom Kabugu, manager of the AIDS
Information Centre Kampala branch. "This is why we have to intensify
the campaigns again."
WOMEN IN THE FRONT LINE
KINSHASA - The first
question the raped women ask is: "Am I HIV positive?"
"For those who have been
raped and infected with AIDS, it is catastrophic, it's very, very
traumatic," said Nene Rukunghu, a doctor at the Panzi Hospital in the
conflict-ridden eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
"It's already very
difficult for the victims of sexual violence to integrate into society.
It's a disaster for those who are also affected by AIDS."
Sixty percent of people
with HIV in Africa are women, compared with 50 percent elsewhere in the
world. Many have contracted the disease through coercive sex.
In DR Congo, more than
1,100 women are raped every day according to one study, with marauding
gangs of militia and soldiers sweeping through villages in cold-blooded
mass attacks.
"When the female victims of
sexual violence arrive at the hospital for treatment, except for the
ones who are seriously hurt, the first question that they ask is if
they are infected by the 'disease'," said Rukunghu.
Up to 30 percent of rape
victims here catch HIV, according to the World Health Organisation
(WHO). Panzi Hospital has treated 920 women living with HIV this year,
including 16 rape victims.
"We had a case of one woman
who was raped and then went home," said Rukunghu.
"Then, she was raped for a
second time and was infected with HIV. After that, she refused to go
home. 'I returned the first time, and then I got AIDS,' she said."
ORPHANS
CAPE TOWN - The bold
letters on the hand-written posters are stuck to a bedroom wall in Cape
Town's shack-filled outskirts: "I am not just a number... I am strong".
They were penned by one of
South Africa's nearly two million AIDS orphans, "Sandile", a skinny,
HIV-positive 10-year-old whose mother died when he was just nine months
old.
"I was young," is his
simple observation of his arrival at the Khumbulani Children's Place of
Safety in 2002.
Sub-Saharan Africa is home
to one in nine of the world's 16.6 million children who have lost one
or both parents to AIDS.
Some like Sandile are
scooped into humble shelters where small bedrooms are shared with three
other boys and the living room is full of baby cots.
But they have a foster
mother to call "mama", someone who worries about food prices, ensures
anti-AIDS drugs are taken, checks on school, and is a generous hugger.
Despite gains in slowing
HIV's spread and expanded treatment, which has also cut infections from
pregnant mothers to newborns, orphan numbers are rising.
The parentless children are
a potential timebomb for Africa's already stretched systems: falling
through cracks, absorbed into extended families to live off meagre
welfare grants, and even forced to head households.
"It's huge. There's no
question about it and it's scary -- it gives me sleepless nights
actually," South African Health Minister Aaron Motsaoeledi told AFP.
CIRCUMCISION
MBABANE - Mfanzile Nxumalo
averts his eyes and screws up his face while his foreskin is sliced
off, but he declares his mettle as the nurse stitches him up. He's
joining in a push by Swaziland to curb HIV infections with male
circumcisions.
"I am the bravest man
alive!" he declares from the hospital trolley. "I?ve tested negative --
that?s what motivates me."
As a 29-year-old Swazi,
Nxumalo has a nearly one in two chance of being infected with HIV in
the small mountainous kingdom which has the world's highest prevalence
rate and lowest life expectancy, 32 years.
After trials suggested
circumcision could reduce HIV infection risk to men by up to
two-thirds, Swaziland decided to revive a tradition that had been
abandoned in the 19th century.
"Everybody seems to want to
use a condom in the research we've done," said Derek von Wissel, who
heads Swaziland's emergency response council on AIDS.
"But often they are too
drunk to use a condom. Or round one they use a condom, round two they
don?t."
The ambitious, US-funded
campaign hopes to reach one in eight Swazi men, but has had
disappointing results so far.
The clinic performing
Mfanzile?s procedure is geared to see 80 patients a day. At best 15
trickle in -- fewer than even before the campaign began in February.
Adverts urging men to
"circumcise and conquer" are everywhere but organisers now admit they
may not reach their targets as quickly as hoped.
"Most of the time in
Swaziland, men are the decision makers. Men must be in the forefront of
this battle," said Health Minister Benedict Xaba. "It takes time for a
Swazi person to accept something new; to accept change."
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