Field officers for the DAPP NGO go hut to hut, village to village, testing locals for the HIV virus, Mazabuka, Zambia November 27, 2017 — Thomson Reuters Foundation |
Sugar brought a rush of people
and prosperity to the drab highway stop in southern Zambia they now call
"Sweet Town" - and with that trade came AIDS.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
To
mine copper or cut cane, outsiders descended on scruffy, fast-growing towns
like Mazabuka, hoping to make a new life and where the men went, a sex industry
followed with local women touring bars, inns and truck stops to sell sex to
newcomers.
It
was a perfect storm for the AIDS epidemic.
"There
was a huge mobile population and the district was simply too overwhelmed with
men who came without their spouses," Jabez Kanyanda, an expert on AIDS,
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation during a tour of the Southern Province of
Zambia where he leads an HIV prevention programme.
Zambia
was one of the world's worst hit countries, part of an African "AIDS
belt" that left millions dead, with 70,000 people dying a year in the
southern African nation at the height of the epidemic in 2003, according to
UNAIDS data.
HIV
prevalence along key transport routes was especially high, as men and women
moved en masse seeking a better life.
"At
the peak of the epidemic, no treatment was available. We had a lot of orphans,
a lot of widows, a lot of widowers," said Kanyanda.
"The
doctors knew, of course, but there was nothing they could do ... Every day,
you'd pass the graveyard and see people moaning, wailing - yet another
funeral."
The
roadside graveyard adjoins the hospital - a crowded field of makeshift
memorials and formal headstones, trees arching over red-earth mounds that mark
the many dead.
Hand-scrawled
signs point to an agony of lost babies: "beloved daughter Gladsy
Mainza" aged two; nearby lies Tia Jonga, who died on Nov. 7, at under four
months old.
"In
our hospital setup, every bed space was taken by someone with HIV. In the
mortuary, every day, two, three dead bodies," Stephen Shajanika,
Mazabuka's District Health Commissioner, recalled in an interview.
Now
the people of Zambia have moved on from the worst and are learning to live with
its aftermath, helped by a military-style campaign to spread information, test
those most at risk, and prescribe drugs to keep AIDS at bay.
"We
are trying to root out every HIV-positive person. We want to find them. We want
to test them. We will do our part and then we empower people who take it very
seriously," said Kanyanda.
Sweet Town
As
the centre of the nation's sugar industry, Mazabuka squats on a busy road in
land-locked Zambia, a land of transit criss-crossed by truckers from eight
neighbouring countries.
As
the cane grew, the people followed - pickers from the west, executives from
Mauritius and South Africa, European funders and African lorry drivers. Women
had less way to gain.
"I've
stopped now but it was just the total poverty. You sleep with men to buy food.
We just had no money to pay the house rental," said Beauty, a 34-year-old
former sex worker who now sells sausages. "I'm a different women
now."
Beauty
is not the only one to change.
Testing
for the HIV virus is up, knowledge has increased and, most importantly, drugs
are available to control the spread of the virus and stop it developing into
AIDS.
The
United Nations estimates there are still 250 new infections a day in Zambia,
but that has dropped 27 percent since 2010 and AIDS-related deaths have fallen
11 percent.
Part
of this is due to campaigns like the one run by DAPP, a local NGO that invented
a seemingly simple strategy to secure a military-style "Total Control of
the Epidemic".
Conducted
one-on-one, door-to-door, this all-out war aims to mobilise individuals to
control their own health and, to that end, has reached more than 1.5 million of
16.5 million Zambians.
Field
officers, special forces and troop commanders man the front and rally the
troops - the language is no accident.
"We
were going in for a fight," said Division Commander Kanyanda.
"We
needed to organise ourselves like military and show we are in a serious
business, fighting a fight with a clear line of command."
Military Campaign
At
the grass roots, DAPP field officers go hut-to-hut to share stories, win trust
and encourage testing, carrying mobile testing kits - a finger pinprick -
giving results in 15 minutes.
Truckers
get free condoms and lessons on their usage while former sex workers tour bars
to spread the message, and revered chieftains go public about their HIV tests
to smash stigma.
Each
strand is another part of the "Total Control" strategy, which began
in neighbouring Zimbabwe in 2000, came to "Sweet Town" in 2006, then
moved to nearby Sinazongwe two years ago.
Sinazongwe's
governor - the top government man in a district of nearly 200,000 people - says
the plan is working.
"The
government will fight HIV/AIDS to the last drop of our blood because it almost
wiped out Africans," District Commissioner Protacia Mulenga, the
government's top official in the region, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"But
I'm the governor here and believe me, the government cannot reach where DAPP
has reached."
Mulenga
is no bureaucratic bystander to the epidemic. Two of his brothers died of AIDS.
His sister is HIV-positive and he cares for her children.
"I
saw my brothers dying in pain. There was no treatment," he said.
"But
now when someone has learnt their status, there's a new control ... They
refrain from blood sharing and careless sex.
"What we have done in Zambia needs extending to other countries. The best experience was learnt here and it needs to penetrate further."
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