| Stemming HIV is a Mere Wish if Social Inequality is Not Tackled By
Angela Ndinga-Muvumba, senior researcher at the University of Cape Town's Centre for Conflict Resolution, South Africa
In September 2000, 189 governments met at the United
Nations ( U.N.) Millennium Summit in New York for a
global ''talk shop'' about the catastrophic conditions
of underdevelopment endured by the world's poorest citizens.
They committed, through the adoption of eight Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), to reverse underdevelopment
by, among others, tackling poverty, empowering women,
increasing access to education and improving health
by 2015. One of the targets of MDG six is to halt and
reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Specifically, with the assistance of the U.N. and its
agencies, all governments should by 2015 reduce the
levels of HIV among 15-24 year old pregnant women; increase
the correct use of condoms among 15-24 year old young
adults; and increase the number of 10-14 year old orphans
attending school.
Presumably, achieving these three objectives would
indicate that the spread of HIV/AIDS had slowed and
that prevention programmes were finally working. Unsurprisingly,
in the countries at the frontline of the pandemic –
Southern African states – the MDG target for HIV/AIDS
is far from being realised.
Only Zimbabwe has shown evidence of a decline in its
national HIV prevalence rates. There is almost no sign
of containment in other Southern African countries.
The MDGs grew out of numerous commitments made at international
conferences and summits in the 1990s. Thus, by 2000,
some countries in Southern Africa were already making
progress in areas of development.
For example, the incidence of absolute poverty in Mozambique
went from 69 percent in 1996/1997 to 54 percent in 2002/2003.
But when it comes to HIV/AIDS, Southern Africa remains
the centre of the global pandemic: only 3.5 percent
of the world's population lives in this region, yet
Southern Africans bear 37 percent of the global AIDS
disease burden.
It is no coincidence that the region is experiencing
the worst of the pandemic. The political, social, economic
and cultural structures of Southern African states reproduce
inequality. Inequality is a prime contributing factor
to vulnerability to HIV/AIDS.
The region's social networks have expanded and intensified
since the end of apartheid. People are more mobile than
ever before. Yet, despite new freedoms, Southern Africans
struggle to find jobs, and therefore lead lives of quiet
desperation in hostels or informal settlements.
Rapid urbanisation has facilitated wider sexual networks,
which have in turn accelerated the spread of HIV. Moreover,
while male circumcision has become acknowledged as important
in the reduction of the spread of the virus, it is not
being practised widely.
The low incidence of male circumcision co-exists with
the prevalence of other sexually transmitted infections
and correlates with high levels of HIV in the region.
A chronic shortage of health workers in Southern Africa
has exacerbated the HIV/AIDS crisis. The human rights
non-governmental organisation Oxfam International estimates
that four million more health workers are required to
address the global pandemic, and that Africa will need
most of these ''new hands on deck''.
Finally, although it is widely acknowledged that women'
s unequal social and economic position in many Southern
African societies leaves them the most vulnerable to
the effects of HIV/AIDS, the empowerment of women is
rarely seen as a strategic tool for reversing the spread
of the disease.
The impoverishment of women – above all, young
females in inter-generational relationships –
exacerbates their lack of power to negotiate the conditions
under which sexual intercourse takes place.
As comprehensive as the MDGs appear to be, they are
not explicitly focused on how to transform these conditions.
What is demanded is the alignment of AIDS-related work
with serious efforts to transform the social order that
spreads HIV/AIDS.
Unsurprisingly, African governments which merely follow
the MDG blueprint without internalising socially transformative
approaches to reduce vulnerability will fail to stop
HIV/AIDS by 2015.
A Southern African Development Community (SADC) heads
of state summit in Maseru in July 2003 adopted a strategic
framework and programme of action for 2003-2007 in order
to address this issue. Subsequently, an HIV/AIDS unit
was established at the SADC secretariat in Gaborone.
While the MDGs highlight a public health perspective
for reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS, the SADC plan
builds on the MDGs by stressing the importance of reducing
vulnerability.
The HIV/AIDS unit has been working to reduce the socio-economic
impact of HIV/AIDS while trying to mobilise a coordinated
response across public and private sectors.
It has lobbied and supported Southern African initiatives
to mitigate the effects of HIV/AIDS across development,
governance and security sectors.
What are some of the ''comprehensive'' initiatives
that SADC has engineered in the last three years to
meet its objectives? The organisation has provided support
to the University of Botswana for including HIV/AIDS
issues in water resources management.
It has created an ethics and principles forum for the
SADC region's media outlets and editors. The SADC HIV/AIDS
unit has presented the region's governments with a model
called ''Circles of Support'' for the care, support
and education of HIV/AIDS orphans and other vulnerable
children.
Finally, the Gaborone office is endeavoring to strengthen
Southern Africa's network of people living with HIV/AIDS,
as well as networks of healthcare workers such as nurses
and midwives.
However, the benefits of these initiatives will only
be realised in the long term. Therefore the MDGs, while
emanating from promises made in the 1990s, seem like
an ephemeral wish list.
This becomes apparent when the MDGs are juxtaposed
with the effects of decades of apartheid in South Africa,
conflict in Angola, Mozambique and Namibia, and underdevelopment
throughout the region. The vast majority of Southern
Africa's chronic poor are history's victims.
If we imagine that the MDGs will lead to miraculous
reversals by 2015, we are underestimating the trajectories
of the region's history and political economy. It means,
to say the least, that we are euphoric in our expectations
of the latest policies and projects of the international
community.
Instead, Southern Africans must understand that until
the even greater struggle to build new egalitarian states
and societies is won, HIV/AIDS will continue undefeated.
(ENDS)
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