EXPERTS LINK GENDER VIOLENCE
WITH SPREAD OF AIDS
INTERNATIONAL
By Peroshni
Govender - WEnews correspondent
JOHANNESBURG
(WOMENSENEWS)
--It happened again: the punches,
the slaps, the kicks. But
this time he went further.
He burned her breasts.
Nomsa's eyes
were swollen and black, her
breasts painful to the touch
and every muscle in her body
ached. Opening her eyes in
the light was a mission. It
hurt too much. She didn't
know if it was the pain that
was unbearable, or the reality
that her assailant was the
man she loved, her husband
and the father of her baby.
Nomsa's story
was told on Wednesday by Prudence
Mabele, a member of the Positive
Women's Network in Pretoria,
one of the 200 delegates attending
a three-day conference in
Johannesburg on gender violence
and health, as an example
of the violence linked with
the transmission of AIDS.
Also at the
conference Wednesday, the
government announced that
it would make AIDS drugs available
at state hospitals for survivors
of sexual assaults. Up to
now, this preventive regimen
was only available to doctors
and health professionals to
treat needle-stick injuries.
Survivors of rape have had
to go to private clinics and
non-governmental institutions
to obtain the drugs.
Mabele told
Nomsa's story to illustrate
what too often occurs to women
married to violent spouses.
Nomsa's HIV
infection was the catalyst
which sparked many of her
husband's rages, a disease
he had given to her and thus
to their son, Thabang.
In addition,
he sold the family home in
Mamelodi, east of the South
African capital of Pretoria,
while Nomsa, 37, was at Thabang's
hospital bedside.
With the virus
taking its toll on Nomsa's
body and a sick boy at her
side, the prospect of life
without her partner seemed
daunting. The couple separated
for a while, but an overwhelming
urge to maintain the family
structure and Nomsa's immense
love for her husband brought
about reconciliation. It was
not long before the violence
returned and it continued
until Nomsa died of AIDS earlier
this month.
South Africans
Remain Unaware of Link between
Violence, AIDS
Jacquelyn Campbell,
a professor at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Nursing,
said that despite the increased
risk of HIV infection among
women in violent relationships,
many South Africans remained
unaware of the effects of
violence on transmission of
the virus. No reliable figures
exist on how many South Africans
are affected by AIDS-related
violence, Campbell said, but
added that trauma to the body
increases risk of HIV infection
and that violent men tend
to have multiple sex partners,
another risk factor for AIDS.
There are approximately
4.2 million people living
with HIV or AIDS in South
Africa, which has the highest
rate of the infection in the
world, according to United
Nations estimates. Of that
number, 2.3 million are women.
"There
is some awareness, but still
I don't think that many people
have thought about gender
violence and its connections
to HIV," Campbell said.
Mabele, who
works with women living with
AIDS, said that many people
believe that AIDS is a disease
that is only contracted by
those who are promiscuous--a
characteristic looked down
upon in South African society.
"I know
of many women who were beaten
by their parents and brothers
because the family was ashamed
to be associated with someone
who has AIDS," she said.
"Rape and an unfaithful
partner are not considered."
Child Rape
Viewed as Cure for AIDS
South Africa's
rape statistics are alarmingly
high. Last year about 300,000
women ages 18 and older were
raped, while about 225,000
rapes of females from infancy
to 17 years old were reported
to police, said Dr. Rachel
Jewkes, director of the government-funded
Medical Research Council's
Gender and Health Research
Group. The numbers add up
to slightly more than 2 percent
of the entire female population.
But these figures
reflect only a small percentage
of rapes that are actually
reported to authorities, Jewkes
told conference participants
Wednesday.
The Medical
Research Council's Dr. Kristen
Dunkle, presenter of a paper
on the relationship between
AIDS and violence, said that
50 percent of the 1,395 women
she had interviewed at three
prenatal clinics in Soweto,
a black township in South
Africa's richest province,
Gauteng, said they been subjected
to some sort of assault by
their husbands or partners.
"Past experience
of intimate partner violence
seems to be positively associated
with sexual risk-taking among
women of reproductive age
in Soweto," she wrote,
referring to the extramarital
affairs, promiscuity and drug
abuse that put them at increased
risk of HIV infection.
Child rape also
is an increasing problem in
South Africa, where many people
mistakenly believe that sex
with a virgin can cure AIDS,
Jewkes said. In the last six
months, the country's national
police services received reports
of five infants, ranging from
1 month old to 1 year old,
being raped.
KwaZulu-Natal,
the country's largest province
with the biggest rural population,
has been hardest hit by AIDS
and the violence that comes
with the disease. Conservative
statistics from the national
Department of Health indicate
that one in four people in
the province is HIV-positive.
With literacy levels exceptionally
low and little access to radio
and television, government
campaigns to inform people
about the infection and ways
of preventing its spread is
making little impact.
One Private
Clinic Provides Anti-AIDS
Drugs to Rape Victims for
Province
A private clinic
that treated rape victims
for the past three years,
Sunninghill Hospital Rape
Crisis Centre, north of Johannesburg
is run by Dr. Adrienne Wulfson,
one of South Africa's leading
experts on the use of anti-retroviral
drugs after rape.
Although the
clinic is in one of the city's
most affluent suburbs, Wulfson
said women are coming from
all over the province to get
the drugs. Its services are
free and the drugs are administered
within 72 hours of rape.
So far 639 patients
have followed the drug regimen.
Of that number, 471 tested
HIV-negative after taking
the drugs for the 28 days
following their rape, Wulfson
said. Eighty-three women tested
positive and 85 refused to
be tested.
Despite the
efficacy of the drugs and
the government's offer to
provide them to rape victims,
it's not yet clear how many
women will benefit.
Authorities
will not dictate which hospitals
should provide the drugs,
said Dr. Nono Simelela, head
of the national health department's
AIDS program, at a press briefing
Thursday in Pretoria. Instead,
it is up to each hospital
to decide whether it has the
infrastructure and capacity
to start providing the drug,
she said.
Wulfson disagreed.
"There is no reason why
the drug can't be made available,
because health professionals
even in the most rural areas
have it . . . to treat needle-stick
injuries."
Peroshni
Govender is a reporter at
the Pretoria News who writes
often about AIDS.
For more
information:
Medical Research
Council of South Africa: -
http://www.mrc.ac.za/
AIDS Foundation
of South Africa: - http://www.aids.org.za/