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The
impact of AIDS on Children: Something can be done
Busie Bhebhe,
Child Protection Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
As HIV and AIDS play
havoc with the security of family life, children find themselves
faced with the uncertainties of orphan-hood. An estimated 2,500
Zimbabweans die weekly of AIDS and the number of orphans is now
pegged at 1,2 million, of who 780,000 have lost their parents to
AIDS. These 780,000 children who have been robbed of their right
to parental love and care and are vulnerable to losing access to
food, education, health care, equality and everything that parents
work to provide for their children. In addition to being a medical
problem AIDS is also a social challenge. Therefore when children
are affected or infected by AIDS, their whole life course changes
and in most cases are forced to take on adult responsibilities as
adults succumb to the disease. Often these changing circumstances
of their lives expose them to trauma, stigma and discrimination
associated with AIDS.
As a matter of fact
- The 1,2 million orphaned children
form 20% of the children’s population in Zimbabwe
- 240,000 children are living with HIV
and AIDS
- There are 5,000 children in institutions*
- There are 12,000 children living and
working on the streets*
- 25% of all children in Zimbabwe are
living in a family with at least one HIV positive parent*
- Between 57 000 and 100 000 children
in Zimbabwe are infected with HIV
Social impact
Aids brings the following into
a child’s life:
- Poverty as resources are diverted
to health care and eventually get exhausted.
- Death if parents also indicate drying
up of sources of income
- Stigma associated with cultural blame
or the deteriorating health and economic status of children
- Discrimination that often is expressed
in social exclusion by friends, relatives and peers and usually
leads to loneliness and depression
- Multiple losses that is parents, other
family members or friends resulting in protracted periods of grief
Health problems due to opportunistic
infections and sometimes poor nutrition and care giving
These facts are a clear
indication that children are bearing the burden of AIDS. If they
are not dying of the disease, their parents or custodians are, leaving
them to completely fend for themselves and deal with pressures no
child should have to concern themselves with. The situation is worsened
by the fact that the extended family system, which used to be a
safety net for orphans has collapsed due to urbanisation and the
impact of HIV and AIDS. Increasingly therefore children are heading
households without any adult guidance.
Hope
In spite of the gloomy picture
children still represent the hope and opportunity for every society.
CPS realises that the problems created by AIDS around children
are so overwhelming that to deal with them calls for a national
multisectoral approach. Government efforts need to be complimented
by NGO and private sector efforts. The success of the Orphan Care
Policy whose thrust is ‘community responsibility for children needing
care’ depends on this multisectoral responsibility.
Action
The following actions should be considered by all concerned:
-
Promotion of programmes
that support orphans and vulnerable children in communities,
psychologically, economically and socially
- Build on children’s own resources
and peer support wherever it is possible
- Provide access to education, health
and social services for orphans and children by deliberately allocating
resources in a child friendly budgets, formulation and planning
- Setting clear firm targets for improving
the lives and prospects of orphaned and vulnerable children
- Making a long term commitment to community
and human development.
Every sector has to realise
that they have a duty of fulfilling children’s rights to survival
and development in an environment where their rights are guaranteed.
As Ghandi said, "If we are to reach real peace in this world
we shall have to begin with the children".
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