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Botswana Struggles to Overcome
the Worst
AIDS
Rate in the World

Health motivator works with teenage students in
Francistown, Botswana, explaining to them why the use
of condoms is important to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Photo: Mark Edwards/ Still Pictures
By Don
Hinrichsen
Francistown--Botswana, April 2001 -- Botswana
is the front line of the war against AIDS. This insidious disease has spread
silently, but all too swiftly through the population of this southern African
nation, that sits on top of South Africa. UNAIDS estimates that fully one-third
of Botswana’s sexually-active population between the ages of 15 and 49 (out of
a total population of 1.5 million) are infected with the virus that causes AIDS,
the highest rate in the world. About 85 persons are infected with HIV every day
and one of every eight infants are infected at birth.
“We
need to declare war on this pandemic,” says Reverend Benjamin Walter Mpho
Moruakgomo of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and one of the country’s
leading advocates for making this disease the government’s number one
challenge. “There is nothing that represents a bigger threat to our lives than
HIV/AIDS. It has wreaked havoc on our population – I don’t know one family
that has been spared.”
The
disease has affected every segment of society, sparing no one. It spread rapidly
after being detected because many people
did not understand how it was spread, or how to prevent it. Although recent
UNFPA surveys show that nearly 80 per cent of people in the 15-49 age group have
some knowledge of how AIDS is contracted, they are not altering their sexual
behaviour.
The problem now is how to transform knowledge into action. Failure to change behaviour
is aggravated by the conspiracy of silence that has surrounded AIDS. Because
infection carries a tremendous societal stigma, many people who are HIV positive
do not go in for testing or counselling, and the course of the disease continues
to take its toll.
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Mpule
Kwelagobe, UNFPA Goodwill
Ambassador meeting with adolscent health motivators in Francistown,
Botswana.
Photo: Mark Edwards/Still Pictures
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Former
Miss Universe and UNFPA Goodwill Ambassador, Mpule Kwelagobe is unequivocal
about AIDS and what the government should be doing about it. On a one week trip
to Botswana with four international journalists, sponsored by UNFPA, Mpule
visited local project sites and talked with health personnel and representatives
of local governments about the need to face up to the AIDS pandemic and what it
is doing to her country. Speaking to a group of villagers and political leaders
gathered under a tent in the quiet suburb of Kanye, 30 kilometres from
Botswana’s capital, Gaborone, she states boldly: “We are all infected with
this virus because we all live in a country that is infected. And until we win
the war against AIDS no one can say ‘I am not infected’.”
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“There is nothing that represents a bigger threat to our lives than
HIV/AIDS. It has wreaked havoc on our population – I don’t know one family
that has been spared.” |
Mpule’s
message that everyone in Botswana must face the threat of AIDS directly, not
hide from it, has helped to galvanize government and NGO campaigns to fight the
disease. “We are taking a multi-sectoral
approach to combating AIDS,” says Ms. Joy Phumaphi, Botswana’s Minister of Health. “We are focusing our prevention efforts on youth,
because they are our future and also the group must susceptible to HIV infection.”
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Mpule (right) talks with
Dipuo, a 23
year old mother of two small children, who is dying from AIDS.
Photo: Mark Edwards/ Still
Pictures
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Despite
the very high infection rate, the faces of AIDS are not easy to find. In a dark,
nearly window-less concrete block house on the outskirts of Gaborone, a woman
props herself up on one bony elbow and stares blankly at the camera. Her name is
Dipuo and she is just 23 years old, with two small children, 2 and 6 years old.
The disease has entered its final stages and she has only a few weeks to live.
As her children play at her bedside, Dipuo talks quietly with Mpule and a small
group of journalists.
“ I was diagnosed HIV positive in July 2000, after a
series of illnesses,” she explains in a voice barely audible. “My boyfriend
ran away when he found out I was infected. I have no idea where he is.” She doesn’t know if her two children have the virus or not, they
haven’t yet been tested. But her grandmother will take care of them when she
is gone. “I have been lucky in one way,’ she explains, “the village has
not ostracized me.” This village,
known as Gabane, is being mobilized
to get the message out about AIDS, as well as to treat victims with dignity and
compassion.
In
1999, with private investment, Mpule set up an independent foundation dedicated
to combating the AIDS pandemic in Botswana. Dipuo is one beneficiary of
Mpule’s efforts. Her foundation has supported the Gabane Home-Based Care
Project which provides victims living in this small community with food, basic
medical care, and above all with companionship and compassion. It is a model
that is being replicated in other parts of the country.
“We
all know people who have died from AIDS,” says Mpule. “We can take definite
steps to fight this disease. We can
no longer afford to bury our heads in the sand.”
The
social and economic costs of ignoring
the pandemic have been debilitating for the country. The average life expectancy
in Botswana has fallen from 67 years to 47 as a result of AIDS. Within 15 years
the economy, though continuing to grow thanks to its main export, diamonds, is
projected to be one-third smaller than it would have been without the impact of
AIDS on the work force.
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“We are all infected with
this virus because we all live in a country that is infected. And until we win
the war against AIDS no one can say ‘I am not infected’.” |
Francistown,
known as the AIDS capital of the world, is the country’s second largest city,
situated 400 kms north east of Gaborone. Here the ravages of the disease are
seen in the frightened look of residents, the proliferation of fresh graves in
the cemeteries and the number AIDS victims occupying hospital beds as they wait
to die.
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Fresh graves in Gaborone's Broadhurst
Cemetery testify to the toll AIDS is taking on Botswana's population.
Photo: Mark Edwards/ Still Pictures
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“Every
Saturday we bury on average 14 AIDS victims and every Sunday 10, every week,
year round” explains Mrs. Margaret Msojane, former President of the
Francistown YWCA and a local tribal
chief. “ In some of the smaller
villages around Francistown they have three funerals every week – all the
victims have died from AIDS.”
Francistown,
like the rest of the country, simply didn’t recognize the threat for what it
was. But they are taking action now. “We are grateful to the international aid
that we have received, especially from UNFPA, in our efforts to fight this
war,” says Mrs. Msojane.
Back
in the capital, Helen Mhone is another outspoken advocate of the need to take
action to fight AIDS. She has a compelling reason for doing so – Helen is one
of only 12 people in the entire country who have “gone public” with their
HIV positive status. In an effort to help other women, like herself, get through
the agony of infection, she founded an NGO called the Coping Centre for People
Living with AIDS (COCEPWA). All members are women and all are HIV positive.
Founded in 1999, it now has 45 members and 50 volunteers. The women meet every
week for therapeutic workshops where they share worries, concerns and
experiences. The atmosphere is positive and the talk constructive.
“We
support each other like a family,” says Helen. “Before I set up this
initiative, there was nothing like it. No support groups existed for HIV
positive people trying to cope with the awful reality of the disease and their
own mortality. But we have made great progress in bringing this disease out into
the open.”
Helen’s
own story is not atypical. “I was diagnosed positive in 1993. It was a
terrible experience. I went through stages – deep depression, total denial,
and finally acceptance”, she explains. “But the worst problem was how to
tell my children. It took me two years to tell them and shortly thereafter I
went public with my status.”
Part
of the problem is that the type of virus afflicting Botswana tends to infect
more women than men. However, women have never had much of a say in family
matters. “We are fighting to change this,” says Helen, her jaw set firmly as
she talks. “It is important to empower both partners together to fight
AIDS.”
Like Mpule, Helen thinks the emphasis of the government’s campaign should be on
prevention, with a focus on youth. “Prevention is the only way to stop this
nightmare from engulfing the country,” says Helen. “And our young people
need to get involved in this fight if we are going to win it.”
Thanks
in part to a generous grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in
Seattle, Botswana is beginning to launch a major nation-wide anti-AIDS campaign.
At its core are a number of inter-linked prevention strategies involving young
people and local communities. Known as the African Youth Alliance, the project
will run for five years and also involves Ghana, Tanzania and Uganda.
One
such beneficiary of the project is Miss Gaone Beauti Dikgole, a 22 year old
volunteer community health motivator working in Kanye, under the auspices of the
Botswana Family Welfare Association (BOFWA). As she demonstrates the use of
condoms, both male and female, she explains the reasons for using them to a
group of slightly embarrassed teenagers and grade school children. “This is
very important work,” she states frankly, “I go around to schools, community
groups, churches, and even town councils to preach prevention and how to do it!
It is important for Botswana that young people come forward and take
responsibility to do what they can to stop this disease. AIDS is the biggest
killer in this country and we must all do our part to halt it.”

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