Zambia: Gender Violence Haunts
HIV Positive Women
January 7, 2008 – (AllAfrica) Violence against Zambian
women is hindering them from accessing and adhering to HIV treatment,
claims a new report by an international human rights group.
According to the report, Hidden in the Mealie Meal: Gender-Based
Abuses and Women’s HIV Treatment in Zambia, by Human Rights
Watch, HIV programmes, activists and policy makers recognise that
discrimination and violence against women must be addressed if
the world is to combat the Aids pandemic.
But treatment policies and programmes still tend to ignore the
connection between domestic violence or women’s insecure
property rights and their ability to seek, access, and adhere
to HIV treatment. Although the Zambian government has taken some
steps to address violence and discrimination against women generally,
major gaps remain in legislation, HIV treatment programmes, and
support services to address poverty among women living with HIV
and Aids.
Human Rights Watch says this must change if HIV treatment is
to be provided equitably and to succeed in saving women’s
lives.
Zambia is one of many countries setting ambitious targets for
rapidly scaling up antiretroviral treatment for HIV and Aids and
is making impressive progress.
It is addressing a range of obstacles to treatment and receiving
substantial donor support to overcome them. “However, women’s
unequal status in Zambian society gravely undermines their ability
to access and adhere to antiretroviral treatment (ART), and the
government is paying little if any attention to the gender dimension
of treatment, especially the impact of entrenched discrimination
and gender-based violence and abuse,” says the report.
Human Rights Watch investigated the negative impact of gender-based
human rights abuses on women’s access and adherence to HIV
treatment in two provinces in Zambia, Lusaka and the Copperbelt,
in 2006 and 2007. Women there told the international NGO how beatings
and rapes by their partners, emotional and verbal abuse, loss
of property upon divorce or death of a spouse, and fear of such
abuses affected their access and adherence to treatment.
The abuses thwarted their ability to seek HIV information and
testing, discouraged them from disclosing their HIV status to
partners, delayed their pursuit of treatment, and hampered their
ability to adhere to HIV treatment regimens.
Many women, fearing abuse or abandonment, fabricated excuses
for their absence from home during clinic visits or support group
sessions and hid their medication in flower pots, holes in the
ground, food containers, and elsewhere. Many struggled to find
money for food, transport to clinics, and diagnostic tests, especially
those whose property was taken when divorced, abandoned, or widowed.
Some missed doses as a result. The strain took a toll on many.
Though gender-based abuses have seriously undermined their ability
to get HIV treatment, most of the women Human Rights Watch interviewed
said their difficulties are simply not discussed in the clinics
where they go for HIV counselling or medicine. With few exceptions,
health care providers did not raise the issue.
Some of the institutions that train HIV counsellors in Zambia
told Human Rights Watch “gender is integrated” into
their training. Yet most of the dozens of HIV counsellors the
rights body interviewed said they do not screen for gender-based
abuses, offer referrals for services, discuss safety strategies
with patients, assess how this impacts treatment, or otherwise
address the abuses.
Treatment adherence counsellors said they count women’s
remaining pills and discuss certain other obstacles to adherence,
but not gender-based abuses. Almost all, however, expressed willingness
to start dealing with these abuses with proper training and support.
“There is perhaps no better place than Zambia to create
a model approach to responding to gender-based human rights abuses
within HIV treatment programmes as part of an overall strategy
to prevent and address these abuses,” the report says.
Situated in Southern Africa, the region most affected by the
pandemic, 17 per cent of Zambia’s adult population is living
with HIV and Aids, and of these, 57 per cent are women. Zambia
also has high rates of gender-based violence. Recent surveys have
found that more than half of women surveyed reported beatings
or physical mistreatment since age 15, and one in six women reported
having been raped.
Before ARVs became freely available to all in Zambia, receiving
a HIV-positive diagnosis was the equivalent of a death sentence.
By introducing a policy of universal access to free ART, the Zambian
government proved its seriousness in attempting to combat the
HIV pandemic and save the lives of many Zambians living with HIV
and Aids.
But there are still life-threatening barriers to the success
of ART programmes and some of these, such as domestic violence
and insecure property rights, affect women disproportionately.
The government of Zambia should urgently address and remove these
barriers, recommends the report.
Zambian women living with the disease suffer persistent constraints
to accessing HIV information, testing, and treatment, and to adhering
to ART. The accounts of women interviewed for this report reveal
the excruciating effects of gender-based violence and insecure
property rights, not only as abuses in their own right, but as
major factors that delay women’s access to life-saving ART,
compel them to hide their HIV status and medicine, and eventually
impede adherence to ART.
The consequences are potentially disastrous since adherence to
ART must be close to perfect (95 per cent) to achieve proper suppression
of HIV. Lack of adherence can also lead to the emergence of new,
resistant strains of HIV that can both be transmitted to others
and lead to drug failure.
Zambia’s health system and legal frameworks are ill-equipped
to respond to gender-based abuses and their effects. In healthcare
facilities HIV treatment adherence counsellors and other healthcare
providers do not generally probe for, discuss, or respond to gender-based
violence and other abuses, thus missing vital opportunities to
support women’s treatment.
HIV treatment counsellors also do not receive specialised training
to help them detect or respond to gender-based violence. There
is no government protocol that instructs counsellors on the practical
steps to detect or address gender-based violence.
Although Zambia has expanded its clinics substantially to accommodate
the increasing need for and supply of ART, in most clinics there
is inadequate private, confidential space for counselling.
Most of healthcare facilities also lack appropriate settings
for women to be able to disclose their experiences of violence
or other abuses.
With respect to legal protections, there is currently no specific
law to address gender-based violence, and the Penal Code has limited
application in cases of domestic violence. It also does not appear
to cover psychological abuse or marital rape.
Widowed and divorced women who are living with HIV and Aids suffer
impoverishment as a result of their inability to exercise and
enforce their property rights, and this affects their ability
to access and adhere to ART. The Intestate Succession Act is not
properly enforced, and property grabbing still occurs.
Widows who experience property grabbing and many women divorced
under discriminatory customary law often sink into deep poverty
and fail to start or adhere to treatment as a result of their
inability to afford food or the transportation necessary to attend
clinic appointments to collect their ART.
According to the report, Zambia still has a long way to go to
fulfill its international and regional obligations in relation
to women’s human rights, including the right to the highest
attainable standard of health. As a priority, the Zambian government
should immediately take necessary steps to integrate detecting
and responding to gender-based violence into the work of healthcare
facilities providing ART.
As a prerequisite, the government should build the capacity of
healthcare facilities and providers so they can respond to the
gender-based abuses described in this report, particularly violence
against women. There are several useful guidelines developed by
international and regional organisations that could help the healthcare
sector in its response to gender-based violence.
The Zambian government should act immediately to introduce constitutional
and legal reform as a critical measure to eliminate discrimination
against women, including under customary law. The government should
make sure that the new constitution affirms equal rights for all
Zambians, including women.
It should enact a law that addresses gender-based violence without
delay, and as a necessary step towards the prevention of gender-based
violence and effective prosecution of perpetrators. The Zambian
government should also enforce the Intestate Succession Act. It
should further ensure that the Matrimonial Causes Act provides
for equal property rights for women upon divorce.
In the long run, it is essential that the Zambian government,
UN agencies and donors work in collaboration with women’s
rights organisations to transform the unequal power relations
between women and men and the social, economic, political, and
cultural factors that maintain gender-based abuses and inequality
in Zambia.
In 2000, the Zambian government, along with other world leaders,
made firm commitments, in the Millennium Development Goals, to
promote gender equality and combat HIV/Aids.
This political commitment and the availability of resources inadequate
as they may be could help Zambia set an example in the Southern
Africa region by removing the overwhelming barriers to HIV treatment
and support that some women face.
Otherwise, gender-based abuses will continue to shatter the lives
of countless Zambian women in acute need of ART and contribute
to avoidable losses of health and lives.
On the positive side, the government has enacted laws to protect
women’s property rights, has established specialised police
units to address gender-based abuses, and in 2006 appointed a
cabinet minister for gender and development.
Civil society organisations provide services for women survivors
of abuse and adults and children living with HIV and Aids. The
country has high-level governmental and multi-sectoral bodies
working on HIV and Aids, and is commended globally for its fight
against the epidemic. It has pledged to make HIV treatment and
related tests free in the public health system and has increased
the number of people on treatment over 30-fold in five years.
However, almost half of all individuals in need of treatment are
still not getting it.
Increasing donor support for its HIV and Aids response puts Zambia
in the spotlight, including as one of 15 focus countries for the
United States President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief
(Pepfar).
Zambia has also ratified major regional and international treaties
that require the government to eliminate violence and discrimination
against women and to guarantee their rights to health, physical
security, non-discrimination and life. It has also committed to
fulfil the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, which
include promoting gender equality, empowering women and combating
HIV and Aids.
To safeguard women’s rights and dignity and to ensure the
success of HIV treatment programmes, Zambia must turn these commitments
into concrete action.
Human Rights Watch calls on the Zambian government to strengthen
its response to HIV and Aids by safeguarding women’s human
rights, ensuring equitable access to antiretroviral therapy (ART),
and providing women on ART access to healthcare services designed
to help them deal with gender-based abuses as part of their treatment.
In this effort the Zambian government should act urgently to enact
and enforce legislation on sexual and gender-based violence.
The government should ensure that the new constitution currently
under debate guarantees women’s equality in all respects,
including matters relating to personal and customary laws.
And the government should ensure that health care providers working
in the areas of HIV and Aids and ART receive adequate training,
clear guidelines, and support to detect and address gender-based
abuses, recommends the report.
It should improve health care infrastructure, including by ensuring
that HIV counselling occurs in a private setting, where women
and their healthcare providers can discuss the existence or risk
of gender-based abuses.
Donor agencies should support these reforms as a priority, endorsing
them as a necessary component of effective treatment for women
with HIV and Aids.
This is a dynamic moment of opportunity and risk in the global
fight against HIV and Aids. Governments and international agencies
are pressing to achieve universal access to HIV prevention, treatment,
care, and support by 2010. Donors are spending tens of billions
of dollars to support HIV treatment.
The number of individuals on HIV treatment worldwide jumped from
400,000 in 2003 to more than two million in 2006 and millions
more will seek testing for HIV infection and start treatment in
the next few years.
Without urgent attention to gender-based abuses, Zambia will
not realise the potential for these efforts, and the lives of
many women will be at risk.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200801071326.html