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INDIAN WOMEN STRUGGLING WITH HIV/AIDS
AND DISCLOSURE
December 2, 2003 (IRIN) Stigma and gender
inequality are helping to drive HIV/AIDS in South Africa's traditionally
conservative Indian communities.
Thirty-year-old Poppy Naicker is illiterate and barely able to make
ends meet. But poverty and her inability to write her own name are
the least of her concerns.
She is HIV-positive and has been laid low by opportunistic infections,
but is shunned by the Indian community of Chatsworth near the port
city of Durban, where she lives with her older sister and three
teenage children in a small overcrowded council flat.
One of just a handful of Indian women in the community willing to
disclose their HIV-positive status, Poppy told PlusNews she had
contracted HIV from a number of encounters with men who paid her
for sex that was often unprotected.
"It is difficult to refuse something if you are not sure of
how good or bad it really is. Now I know about the importance of
condoms and how to use them, but it is too late for me. If I knew
then what I know now, I would definitely have refused unprotected
sex."
Since her disclosure, her family has turned their backs on her and
blame her illness on "conduct unbecoming to an Indian woman".
"Indian families always have a strong support for struggling
members, but more needs to be done about educating the families
about HIV/AIDS and making them speak more freely about the dangers
of having the virus, and how to avoid infection," Poppy explained.
Savy Subramany, chief coordinator for the Chatsworth Community Care
Centre, one of the few AIDS NGOs operating there, said the stigma
against HIV/AIDS - that infection stemmed mainly from promiscuous
sexual behaviour - had stopped many people in the Indian community
from acknowledging their status.
Subramany said because a woman's morals and faithfulness were questioned
when she tried to negotiate safer sex, couples were still engaging
in unprotected sex, even when they suspected that one or both of
them might be HIV-positive.
"I have come across people who suffer silently without disclosing
their status, and without counselling or the appropriate care. Those
who are not willing to disclose often die slowly, alone and in agony,"
Subramany commented.
Gender-based inequality leaves all women - not just those from the
Indian community - more vulnerable to contracting HIV/AIDS because
they are less able to control how, when and where sex takes place.
Forty-five-year-old Nimmi Ramsarran found herself in this situation
when her husband, who often travelled for his work, suddenly became
quite ill.
Nimmi said she suspected her husband might have contracted HIV during
his road trips, but was afraid to confront him about it - not out
of fear of her husband, whom she said she loved dearly, but rather
out of her commitment to him as a traditional Indian wife.
The couple continued to engage in unprotected sexual intercourse
and it was only when Nimmi's husband became worryingly ill that
he decided to get a full medical examination, including an HIV test.
Following her husband's HIV-positive result, the private clinic
where the tests were done advised Nimmi to be tested as well, but
her result was negative.
"It was only when I was referred to the Chatsworth Community
Care Centre for counselling that I met Savy, who spent many hours
offering me the support and education I needed to make it through
to a second HIV test," she explained.
The period between tests was gruelling for Nimmi - apart from the
fear of discrimination, she also had to conceal the cause of her
husband's death when he died.
"With help from the centre I was able to hold on until the
second HIV test, which also turned out negative, and I have only
recently overcome the fear of community members discovering mine
and my dead husband's secret."
Although she is a lot more confident that her third HIV test will
also turn out negative, she speaks anxiously about the episode and
still refers to HIV/AIDS as "that thing".
The project manager for the University of Natal's Health Economics
and AIDS Research Division, Marlene Abrahams, says more needs to
be done to encourage people to speak openly about HIV/AIDS, and
agrees that research on individual households could also help to
bring
about a greater understanding of the impact of HIV/AIDS on various
cultural groups.
A recent study commissioned by former president Nelson Mandela through
the Human Sciences Research Council, claims to provide the most
systematic and comprehensive view available on how HIV/AIDS is affecting
South Africans according to race, gender, age and geographical location.
According to these findings, Indians make up 2.6 percent of the
46 million South African population, but represent 1.6 percent of
all HIV-positive people.
Abrahams stressed: "I feel more could done in the way of advertising
campaigns, as the HIV/AIDS pandemic is also still largely regarded
as a white or black person's illness and recent advertising campaigns
don't do much to change that perception. It is difficult for someone
of Indian ... [heritage] to relate to the urgency of AIDS awareness
and behavioural change when you look at a billboard and see black
or white or mixed race, but no Indians."
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200312020143.html
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