---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 01 Dec 1998 16:14:56 MET
From: AF-AIDS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [41] Southern Africa Faces 'Disaster' as AIDS Spreads - L.A. Times

Southern Africa Faces 'Disaster' as AIDS Spreads
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday, December 1, 1998 Dean E. Murphy, Times Staff Writer

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa--Two startling reports on AIDS show the disease is 
spreading so rapidly in South Africa that it threatens to cripple the economy and 
devastate families for decades, perpetuating the ills of apartheid.

Released to coincide with World AIDS Day today, the reports say that while the AIDS 
epidemic was slow in coming to South Africa and its neighbors compared with other 
parts of the continent, it now has arrived with a vengeance. The region has become the 
hardest hit in the world. One in 10 people infected with HIV worldwide lives in South 
Africa.

"Some of the advances made by the new South African democracy will be reversed unless 
we act now," said J. David Whaley, who coordinates United Nations programs in South 
Africa. "South Africa's history demonstrates that in partnership the nation fought and 
overcame apartheid. It will surely not be defeated by an insidious new threat over 
which it can have control."

U.N. officials, authors of one of the two reports released here Monday, have chosen to 
focus World AIDS Day for the first time on southern Africa because of what they 
characterize as an "unprecedented emergency" only fully recognized in the past year.

On average, one person is infected with HIV--the human immunodeficiency virus that 
causes AIDS--each minute in South Africa, according to data compiled by the U.N. 
Program on HIV/AIDS, or UNAIDS.

If the trend continues over the next decade, government officials here say, the 
average South African can expect to live just 40 years. About 130,000 South Africans 
have died so far this year of AIDS complications, according to the South African 
Department of Health. The number of deaths annually is projected to double during the 
next three years, and to exceed 500,000 by 2008, if current rates of infection 
continue.

The worst-affected countries in the world--Botswana, Namibia, Swaziland and 
Zimbabwe--are neighbors of South Africa, and the U.N. says South Africa is catching up 
rapidly. About 25% of the adult population is infected in Botswana and Zimbabwe. 
Estimated rates of infection vary widely across the major countries of sub-Saharan 
Africa, from 4% in Nigeria to 10% in Ivory Coast and 11% in Kenya. South Africa's rate 
is 13%.

In the past year, according to one estimate, about 1.4 million people between the ages 
of 15 and 49 were infected in nine southern African countries. About half of the new 
infections were in South Africa. In all, more than 3.2 million people in South Africa 
are infected with HIV.

"Be it man-made catastrophes such as apartheid, colonialism, or natural disasters such 
as drought, none of these will claim so many victims," said Dr. Peter Piot, executive 
director of UNAIDS. "We now know that despite these already very high levels of HIV 
infection, the worst is still to come in southern Africa. The region is facing human 
disaster on a scale it has never seen before."

With the disease arriving relatively late to the region, government and community 
responses are lagging. Piot said his agency's stepped-up interest in southern Africa 
is meant to pressure governments to do more.

Most Africans cannot afford life-prolonging drugs common in the United States. But 
some countries in Central and East Africa, where AIDS struck hard and early more than 
a decade ago, have established education and prevention programs that have helped 
reduce infections. Many southern African countries, by contrast, are just now 
understanding the dimension--and ubiquity--of the problem, U.N. officials said.

A 1994 AIDS plan went largely unheeded in South Africa, for example; the government 
has only now put together a new national strategy for dealing with the economic, 
social and medical implications of the disease. Among other things, the strategy calls 
for dedicating more resources to community-based programs for women, who, statistics 
indicate, are more likely to be infected than men and who bear the brunt of AIDS' 
social and economic fallout.

The government recently decided to stop subsidizing treatments with the drug AZT for 
nursing mothers, saying the drug was too expensive and the money better spent on 
treating other sexually transmitted diseases and tuberculosis--common illnesses of 
people with AIDS. Health officials say they also will devote resources to developing 
more community care programs, which are cheaper than hospitals and usually preferred 
by patients.

"The reaction has been late here, that is for sure, but it is never too late," Piot 
said. "What matters now is there is a really good plan and a good strategy. But it has 
to be implemented."

The South African Department of Health, which commissioned the second report released 
Monday, identifies the spread of AIDS as a major obstacle to reducing poverty and the 
still-enormous income disparity between blacks and whites. It predicts that poor 
families will be made poorer, while those beginning to escape the shackles of 
apartheid will be thrust back into despair.

"The greatest impact will be felt at the household and family level, where the impact 
is often most disastrous," said Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, South Africa's minister for 
welfare and population development. "There is no longer any time on our side to 
continue the luxury of both denial and of stigmatization of this pandemic."

Officials and AIDS experts are largely unable to explain why the disease is striking 
southern Africa so hard. During the past eight years, according to the UNAIDS report, 
the prevalence of HIV infection at prenatal clinics has increased more than 21 times 
in South Africa. The legacy of apartheid, from its migrant labor system to widespread 
poverty, is blamed for encouraging casual and commercial sex, but apartheid does not 
explain skyrocketing infection rates in neighboring countries.

"We have to accept that we don't understand it completely," Piot said. "This is 
something that can't be fixed overnight."

Dr. Mark Ottenweller, Africa director for Hope Worldwide, which operates AIDS clinics 
in 12 African countries, said economic development has helped the virus spread in 
southern Africa. Roads and highways, for example, are in relatively good condition, 
allowing people to visit remote areas. Unfortunately, he said, health care has not 
kept up with economic progress, leaving newly infected people in faraway places with 
nowhere to turn for treatment.

About 1,500 volunteers for Hope Worldwide distributed AIDS awareness brochures and 
condoms to 150,000 people in some of Johannesburg's poorest neighborhoods during the 
weekend. Gone are the days when people told volunteers that AIDS was a white man's 
myth, Ottenweller said.

Denial, however, is still widespread. In a survey of 1,000 people in the nearby black 
township of Soweto this year, 90% of the respondents identified AIDS as deadly, but 
70% believed they were at little or no risk of becoming infected with HIV. Nearly 
two-thirds said they had never used a condom; half of the respondents said they did 
not even know where to get one.

Nomusa Njoko, a 26-year-old mother who is HIV-positive, said the denial is a form of 
self-protection in a society hostile to people with AIDS. When she went public with 
her infection, Njoko said, she was asked to leave her church choir.

"There is discrimination everywhere," said Njoko, who works for an AIDS support group 
in Durban. "It is unfortunate that it has taken our government quite a while to stand 
up and say there is a problem."

AIDS in Africa

South Africa's AIDS rate is catching up with that of its hardest-hit neighbors:

Percentage of adults with HIV/AIDS
Kenya: 11%
S. Africa: 13%
Namibia: 20%
Zimbabwe: 25%

--------------------------------------------------------
- This is a posting from [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- For anonymous postings, add the word "anon" to the subject line
- To join or leave this forum, add the word "join" or "leave" to the subject 
- Browse all postings at: http://www.hivnet.ch:8000/af-aids/tdm
--------------------------------------------------------


Reply via email to