Matron, Dudu Zwane, sits with her iintombi (maidens) and explains the importance of virginity in Zulu culture in Ezakheni, on the outskirts of Ladysmith, South Africa ©Leonardo Angelucci (AFP) |
Thubelihle Dlodlo would
not have made it to university in South Africa this year as her family could
not afford the fees, but virginity brought her a lifeline.
AFP
report continues:
As
long as she remains a virgin, her tuition and boarding fees will be paid by her
hometown municipality until the completion of her bachelor's degree in
education at a Pretoria university.
The
18-year-old secured a bursary or grant that rewards "maidens" in an
attempt to curb teenage pregnancies and the rampant spread of HIV/AIDS in
UThukela district, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) north of the coastal city
of Durban.
"This
bursary is so important because it will change my future. I can conquer the
world," said Dlodlo, wearing a green-and-yellow miniskirt and
multi-coloured necklace beads.
The
size of the grants varies, but can be worth several thousand dollars a year.
A
fellow recipient, Bongiwe Sithole, would also have dropped out of university
due to poverty, but now will continue her studies.
Even
at 32, she has delayed having sex.
"There
is no limit for us as maidens," Sithole said. "We are going to get
the bursary (whether we)... pass with distinction or not.
"With
your body, with your virginity, we get the bursary."
Halfway
through her four-year teaching diploma, she is the oldest of the 16 beneficiaries
of the grants.
One
of the conditions, however, is to undergo virginity tests, conducted by elderly
women.
Rights
activists are in an uproar over the idea of virginity tests, let alone the
procedure itself, which they consider demeaning.
But
the UThukela authorities are unfazed.
"The
main reason behind introducing the bursary is that... in our district we have
got a very high rate of teenage pregnancies, and a lot of young people are
infected by HIV and AIDS," mayor Dudu Mazibuko told AFP.
Up
to half of the population between the ages of 15 and 49 in the district is
infected with HIV and AIDS, according to municipal statistics.
- Idea from 'maidens' -
The
number of teenagers giving birth in South Africa is high -- with around 25
percent of girls becoming pregnant by the age of 19, according to statistics
cited by the fact-checking organization Africa Check.
"To
find young girls that are able to abstain -- for us that is an encouragement
and we saw it fit that we encourage them by giving bursaries," said Mazibuko.
She
said the idea was mooted by the "maidens" themselves, who complained
that they were not recognized, while their peers who fall pregnant get
"rewarded" by the government with child support grants.
But
gender and women's rights activists strongly oppose the scholarship scheme.
Bathabile
Dlamin, the ruling African National Congress women's league chairwoman and
minister of social development, slammed virginity testing as a "patently
harmful practice steeped in patriarchal practices that serve to oppress
women".
UThukela
district mayor Dudu Mazibuko maintains that virginity tests are a way to
control the spread of HIV and reduce unwanted pregnancies in South Africa
©Leonardo Angelucci (AFP)
|
The
Commission for Gender Equality's chairman Mfanozelwe Shozi said the bursary
scheme "looks very discriminatory" and violates the constitution
because it comes with the "conditionality" that the girls must be
virgins.
And
there appears to be no evidence of its impact on the HIV health crisis.
"There
is no qualitative and quantitative research that has actually proven that by
inspecting girls, you are going to reduce HIV/AIDS," Shozi said.
Rights
groups are also concerned that virginity screening is intrusive.
- 'Keep your virginity' -
But
the maidens, the women who do the testing, and the local authorities disagree.
"Virginity
testing does not invade my privacy. I love who I am and it gives me more
dignity," said Dlodlo.
She
hopes to be a "role model" for other young women.
"There
is no invasion of privacy because it's done voluntarily, it's not painful,
there is no humiliation at all," added Mazibuko, Uthukela's female mayor.
Dudu
Zwane, 58, is a former health worker who now carries out the tests.
She
says she can determine virginity by a visual inspection of genitalia -- a
concept dismissed by medical experts.
"What
I am doing is to bring back our culture. Our bayethe (traditional Zulu king)
says keep your virginity," she said, bemoaning the high HIV rate.
The
mayor denied that the tests were sexist, saying that plans were under way to
launch a similar scheme for boys, without explaining how they would be tested.
"We
have started with the girls because they are more vulnerable, but... our long-term
plan is ensuring that we reward young boys who stay virgins," she said.
Mazibuko
challenged those criticizing the bursary scheme to "come up with better
solutions."
"We want to fight HIV
and AIDS, we want to stop teenage pregnancy. This is what we thought will work
for us."
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