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Assist
children displaced by HIV & AIDS, business community urged
Chipo Mukome, Child Protection
Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
As HIV/AIDS continues to cause untold
suffering and death in Zimbabwe and other sub-Saharan African countries,
the business community has been challenged to ease the burden by
directly assisting children displaced by the pandemic.
According to a UNICEF study in July 2002,
close to one million children in Zimbabwe have been orphaned because
of AIDS and this figure is expected to shoot to 1,3 million by 2005.
With no cure in sight, a great number
of the Zimbabwean population continues to succumb to the deadly
virus with children being the most affected. This is why it is important
for community members and the business community to assist these
children in a holistic way. Apart from material requirements like
clothing, food, shelter, water, medicine, educational assistance,
these children also require psychosocial support such as counseling,
love, recreation and emotional support from the community.
In its work with children, Child Protection
Society has realized that, as a result of the HIV/AIDS pandemic,
the children’s situation in Zimbabwe is desperate due to several
factors. Unlike in the past, Zimbabwe has seen more children assuming
parental responsibility at a very young age after their parents
die as a result of HIV/AIDS. These children who have no knowledge
and understanding of parental roles and responsibilities are forced
to forego their childhood, thus depriving them of opportunities
for survival and development. It is clear that these children will
experience great difficulties in adjusting to adulthood as they
are forced to skip critical stages of development.
Reports have also been received of these
children being chased out of their parents’ homes by greedy relatives
who sometimes claim benefits from employers, which should rightfully
belong to the affected children. Without resources or knowledge
of their options through legal recourse, these children resign to
their fate. Unable to face the hardships at home, some of the children
resort to desperate means to survive and many escape to the streets.
As a result of HIV/AIDS coupled with
a struggling economy, 12,000 children are living on-and -off the
streets of Zimbabwe. However, life on the streets, as research has
shown does not serve the best interests of the children. A sizable
population of those children are exposed to dangerous experiences
which include sexual abuse, taking of harmful drugs like glue-sniffing,
alcohol abuse, teenage pregnancy and gangsterism.
A few of the children who lose their
parents due to HIV/AIDS end up in children’s homes where the facilities
may not be adequate or proper to foster a normal childhood for them.
It is against this background that the
business community especially former employers of community members
who die as a result of HIV/AIDS have been challenged to provide
material and psychosocial support to these children.
Visit the Child
Protection Society fact
sheet
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