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U.S. backs Zim youth in fight against AIDS stigma
US
Embassy
January 28, 2013
The United States
and Zimbabwe are investing in/focusing on youth to continue the
fight against HIV/AIDS stigma and discrimination and have provided
resources to a youth-focused organization to expand its outreach.
"Stigma and discrimination
continue to prevent some people from accessing readily available
HIV and AIDS support services. Especially among the large, important
youth population, there are gaps in knowledge and great stigma to
overcome," said Bruce Wharton, United States ambassador to
Zimbabwe, as he awarded a US$5000 grant to Africaid last Thursday
on behalf of the President's Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief
(PEPFAR).
Africaid was named the
winner of the 2012 Auxillia Chimusoro HIV and AIDS Alumni Award
ceremony held in Harare last Thursday. The ceremony was attended
by senior government officials including Honorable Henry Madzorera,
the Minister of Health and Child Welfare, who delivered remarks
about the strong U.S.-Zimbabwe partnership in addressing HIV/AIDS
issues, as well as AIDS service organizations, and international
organizations. As this program recognized programming that supports
the national response to HIV/AIDS, the Ambassador recognized the
appropriateness of last December's World AIDS Day theme, "Getting
to Zero - My Responsibility, Your Responsibility."
Africaid director Nicola
Willis said her organization, which works with HIV positive youth,
will use the grant to support a musical DVD production by HIV positive
children and adolescents, supported by national artists. The production
is provisionally titled "Make us the last generation to be
born with HIV" and is a continuation of Africaid's innovative
"Zvandiri" model which provides community-based treatment,
care, support and prevention services for HIV positive children
and adolescents.
"I am particularly
impressed that, ultimately, you want these young men and women to
be the "last generation to be born with HIV," said the
U.S. Ambassador, whose country has provided over $390 million in
towards Zimbabwe's response to HIV/AIDS since 2005. "That
is a noble cause - and as science tells us, is a realistic
one. But we have to continue to work together."
This year alone, the
U.S. pledged $95 million to the national HIV/AIDS response in Zimbabwe
through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)
to support critical health interventions designed to prevent more
HIV infections; to scale-up combination prevention initiatives;
to assist those orphaned by HIV and other vulnerable children; and
to strengthen the Zimbabwean health system. According to recent
estimates from UNAIDS, nearly 150,000 children are living with HIV
in Zimbabwe and an estimated 8,000 were newly infected in by the
end of 2011 with the vast majority of them through mother to child
transmission.
To highlight
the importance of youth-focused activities and outreach to often
overlook populations, the event organizers invited the Royal B-Boy
hip-hop crew of Mbare to perform at the event. The crew won the
Jibilika Dance Trust World AIDS Day Festival last year (December
1, Harare Gardens) with their expressive dance response to HIV/AIDS
in their lives. Recognizing their potential as role models in their
community of mostly unemployed and out of school youth, the crew
aims to represent positive behavior choices.
Traditionally,
the Chimusoro awards are based on nominations from the public. However,
the 2012 awards asked that alumni (over 40 former award winners
over roughly a dozen years) submit proposals detailing how they
would spend a single $5,000 award. 14 submitted proposals that were
adjudicated by a panel of judges including representatives from
USAID, the National
AIDS Council, the Centers for Disease Control/Zimbabwe, and
the Public Affairs Section.
The eventual
winner, Africaid, was a 2011 award winner. Other alumni include
musician Oliver Mtukudzi; and journalists Catherine Mwayakufa, Beatrice
Tonhodzayi and Bertha Shoko.
The awards are named after Auxillia Chimusoro, the first person
in Zimbabwe to publicly disclose her HIV positive status in 1989
at a time when stigma and discrimination was common. She founded
the Batanai HIV/AIDS Support Group in 1992 and was one of the founders
of the Zimbabwe
National Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS. She also worked
with several support groups before her death in June 1998.
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