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HIV/AIDS rate soars in war-torn
northern Uganda
By Daniel Wallis
September 27,2 004 - (Reuters) HIV/AIDS rates
in northern Uganda are nearly twice as high as the rest of the country
because of an 18-year war with the brutal Lord's Resistance Army
rebel group, an aid agency said on Monday.
"National prevalence rates for
Uganda are estimated at 6.2 percent and declining, but rates in
war-affected areas are almost double that of the national average,
at 11.9 percent," World Vision said in a new report.
In Gulu district, epicentre of the rebellion, researchers found
HIV/AIDS was the leading cause of death at 69 percent of fatalities,
three times higher than direct killings during military confrontation,
World Vision said.
The aid agency said massive displacement, poverty, lack of health
care, and the high prevalence of rape as a weapon of war all contributed
to the high number of infections.
About 80 percent of residents in northern Uganda live in squalid
camps because of the conflict with LRA rebels who have waged a war
against the government of President Yoweri Museveni that has killed
tens of thousands through violence and disease.
The insurgency by the cult-like group and its elusive leader Joseph
Kony has forced more than 1.6 million people into camps, where up
to 21 percent of children are malnourished and as many as 15,000
people share a single water source, World Vision said.
It said the virtual collapse of health-care systems meant northerners
could not access information about HIV/AIDS, or take advantage of
testing, counselling and treatment.
Uganda's government, which has won international acclaim for reducing
the HIV infection rate from around 30 percent in the early 1990s,
could see many of those gains evaporate if the war was not brought
to an end, it said.
Children were the main victims of fighting that costs the country
more than $100 million a year, said the report, "Pawns of Politics:
Children, Conflict and Peace in Northern Uganda."
The LRA has kidnapped as many as 25,000 children to serve as fighters,
porters and sex slaves who make up more than three-quarters of its
ranks.
About half the girls abducted by the rebels are later found to carry
the HIV virus, doctors say.
"If these girls make it back from the bush, they are sometimes
rejected and abandoned by their families," World Vision said.
"Some resort to survival sex, engaging in high risk behaviours
that increase the spread of the disease."
It said any post-conflict plan must make special provisions for
counselling and community reintegration efforts for girls who were
victims of sexual bondage.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L27176765.htm
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