Chief
Delezi Masilela stunned his community when he announced publicly
that he was HIV-positive. Unless people face the truth, communities
like his are doomed, he says (p9894)
A Red Cross nurse tends a mother who is dying of an AIDS-related
disease. At 40 per cent, Swaziland has the second highest HIV/AIDS
prevalence rate in the world (p9892)

Another AIDS death nears in Swaziland. Tomorrow five more children
will be orphaned, joining the 3.2 million already in the region
(p9891)

In Swazi culture, when a farmer dies, others in the community
step in and help to work his land. But now even they have died.
Chief Masilela advocates a communal approach, setting aside
land for orphans and crop sharing as a way of dealing with the
crisis (p9893)
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New reality requires new strategy
in southern Africa
27 May 2003
by John Sparrow in Evusweni, Swaziland
Chief Delezi Masilela did the
unthinkable. He stood up in his rural community in central Swaziland
and said he was HIV positive.
It sent a shudder through the homesteads of Evusweni and his family
counselled him to be silent. They said he was bringing shame upon
them, and one of his wives soon left him.
The traditional chief, who already suffers from tuberculosis, could
have expected it. Although he lives in a country with the second-highest
prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the world, the stigma around it is so great
the disease is kept in the shadows.
Officially, almost 40 per cent of Swazi adults are said to be infected,
based on findings among pregnant women more than a year ago. The true
picture is probably worse.
With prevalence climbing, the Red Cross fears that in parts of southern
Africa the figure could soon be upwards of 50 per cent.
But as things stand, few of the 20,000 Swazis expected to be infected
this year will ever be open about it. They are simply too afraid.
A health ministry survey has shown that while people are willing to
care for HIV-infected relatives, most ostracise others living with
the virus. Information campaigns ensure there is widespread general
awareness but AIDS isn’t something ordinary people talk about.
And behind the veil of secrecy, the ministry found, risk-taking behaviour
has not diminished, either. Given the prevalence of the virus, the
prognosis is grim for this kingdom of 970,000 people.
Seeing more and more people dying around him, Chief Masilela made
his stand. He had to break the silence.
The impact of AIDS on agriculture, the poverty left in its wake, the
plight of children orphaned and women widowed had left him fearful.
Unless people speak up and face up to the spread of HIV, he believes,
his community is doomed. “If things don’t change, it will
just die off,” he says.
The chief's fears are shared by the Red Cross. The threat to communities
such as his is reflected in an emergency appeal launched today by
the International Federation. Seeking 13.6 million Swiss francs (US$
10.3 million), it will extend Red Cross National Society operations
in Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia
and Zimbabwe.
The appeal sets out new strategy based on an integrated community-level
response. The interaction of HIV/AIDS, failed health care, poverty
and food insecurity has created an unprecedented disaster conventional
intervention cannot contain, it says.
Without fresh approaches a dramatic fall in life expectancy, a decimation
of the workforce and agricultural production, and the destitution
of whole communities are inevitable.
The appeal depicts the erosion of community fabric, with HIV/AIDS
the driving force. Poor and worsening access to health care, the accelerated
spread of tuberculosis, malaria and other disease, a widespread shortage
of safe water and sanitation, uncontrolled urbanization, and ineffective
agriculture are among the aggravating factors, it says.
It calls for a response in which these inter-related ills are no longer
dealt with separately. A comprehensive package of measures is needed,
it says, to curb a patchwork of problems feeding and exploiting each
other.
Masilela sees the evidence around him. He spells out what AIDS does
to farming. “The people who are dying should be out there ploughing
and planting the fields,” he says. "Swazi culture is such
that when a farmer dies others in the community step in, help work
the land. But even they have died. There is no one to assist anymore.”
Land lies idle as a consequence.
Failed harvests prompted a global response of food aid to avert starvation
in southern Africa, but now, as harvests improve in parts of the region,
aid is being scaled down. The threat of famine has, for now, receded
but food insecurity has not.
The chief is particularly concerned for women and orphans plunged
into chronic poverty by the loss of husbands and parents. Women are
disproportionately affected by AIDS. It is they who nurse the sick,
they who form more than 50 per cent of the infected, and they who,
as widows, are left to feed, educate and agonize over the future of
their soon-to-be-orphaned children.
Busisiwe, a 37-year-old mother of five whose husband died of AIDS
a year and a half ago, is one of them. On her homestead, Masilela
leads the way through high green maize, part of the coming harvest,
but the impression it gives is misleading.
Busisiwe is struggling to keep her children fed. Unable to afford
seed or work her fields properly, she leased them to neighbours for
a share of the crop. But even after this year’s promising harvest
she will retain but a few bags of maize.
She is eating into them already. Short of food, she is cutting and
grinding the unripe crop, and those bags will be depleted further.
Her children’s school fees are in arrears and when harvest comes
she must sell some maize to pay them, or the children will be excluded.
Something else has concerned her lately: her own health and strength
is waning. She has TB and awaits the outcome of a Red Cross HIV test.
Soon she could face a mother’s greatest fear: who will care
for her children.
Already southern Africa counts 3.2 million children orphaned by AIDS,
many of them in child-headed households, where tomorrow’s meal
is not guaranteed and youngsters drop out of school because they,
too, cannot afford the fees.
Only when the denial of AIDS is dispensed with can communities start
to look for solutions.
Chief Masilela is working on food security. He has already persuaded
the elders to set aside land for orphans, and advocates communal farming
and crop sharing to help infected and ailing people. Outside help
with such schemes would be welcome.
Humanitarian thinking and analysis must change, the Federation appeal
says, warning that donor and governmental policy could soon lag behind
the emerging challenges. A new paradigm is needed, and the Federation
is calling for “a consortium of partners with special interests
and capacities” to intervene now to contain the crisis and develop
medium and long-term strategy to return communities to normality.
Delezi Masilela’s quest to change his community’s mindset
is part of the same equation. The removal of stigma is but one step.
Cultural standards and practices in a traditionally polygamous society
present other critical challenges. Multiple sexual partners are the
norm in Swaziland, casual sex is highly prevalent and premarital sex
starts young.
These habits can be traced to a time when life expectancy was low
and infant mortality high. Then they were a question of survival.
Today they mean the spread of HIV and the reversal of development.
Masilela’s voice can be likened to a prophet’s crying
in the wilderness. There are signs that some people are listening.
To others what he says is heresy.
He acquired the virus, he says, when he inherited a late brother’s
wife, who has herself passed away. He suggests that HIV testing should
today precede the traditional practice. Given Swazi reluctance to
be tested, and the fear of the stigma it might bring, it is a less
than palatable notion.
But AIDS has changed the face of disaster in Africa. Everyone must
change with it. Unless they do, warns the Federation, the apocalypse
of AIDS will very soon be unstoppable.
Related links:
Southern Africa Food
Crisis
News story: Swaziland stalked by
an "alliance of ills"
Reducing the impact of HIV/AIDS
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