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Zimbabwe's
Women Acting Against AIDS
By Isabella Matambanadzo*,
Zimbabwe Women's Resource Centre and Network (ZWRCN)
June 15, 2004
The archives
of the regional southern Africa office of the United Nations Development
Fund for Women, UNIFEM has some precious photographs that offer
a record of women's life experiences in the year 2003. In its own
way, each image shows the very different ways women across the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) region endure a world in which
poverty has increasingly determined the extent to which women are
able to make choices. In one of the pictures four women in their
late 20s and early 30s sit side by side, enjoying a moment of sisterhood
in the African sunshine.
A shared experience
connects them. They are all determined and gallant activists in
the movement of women living with HIV and AIDS, agitating for their
rights. Hope glows from their faces. Hope of an imminent victory
in a struggle that seeks to set women free from all forms of oppression
and injustice. But no amount of creative artistry could have enabled
the photographer's lens to capture the story behind Angeline Chiwetani's
glasses.
In 1999, the
working mother of two young boys learned to be tough. She had hit
the hardest of times. Her husband, HIV positive and without treatment,
needed constant looking-after. Chiwetani drafted a letter of resignation
and handed it over to her employers.
Moving away
from a job that provided the family its sole income put Chiwetani's
life at its darkest ever. For 12 long and lonely months she was
miserable and knew little else but pain, anger and disappointment.
Women and
the stigma of AIDS
"My
marriage had problems. My husband used to go beyond our bedroom
and have sexual relations with other women. I told my family lets
talk and adjust the situation and they said I was trying to rule
the roost, "says Chiwetani.
"No one
came to see my husband except for my relatives and friends. My in
laws, his brother and sisters labeled me a city woman. They meant
I could go and sleep with any guy, " says Chiwetani, pointing to
a kind of isolation that women caring for HIV positive husbands
have repeatedly voiced.
Thousands of
HIV positive women across the sub-Saharan African region daily suffer
the nasty effects of gossip, ugly name-calling and being labeled
everything from whore to witches. Their collective experiences show
the extent to which addressing AIDS related stigma remains a critical
priority for any actions aimed at cutting back the impacts of the
epidemic on African women. Eliminating the segregation, isolation,
emotional and psychological violence HIV positive women like Chiwetani
and their families bear.
Women's resistance
to AIDS gains momentum
Chiwetani
has become a leader, organizing support and care for HIV positive
women and their families and communities. The last four years have
seen Chiwetani develop strength and resilience. Her boys, now aged
12 and seven, are at school and their grades have been encouraging.
She was recently appointed the Executive Director of the Network
for Zimbabwe Positive Women (NZPW+), a not for profit group that
supports more than 3000 HIV positive women across the country in
various ways.
NZPW+ is supported
by UNIFEM, through a special fund aimed at empowering HIV positive
women to put pressure on public institutions to safeguard the rights
of especially women living with HIV and AIDS.
"We need to
get what we need to save ourselves", she says, running off her fingers
some of the resources that HIV positive and other women need to
secure empowerment and autonomy, "Education is key, so are jobs,
access to treatments for the illnesses HIV positive women face and
above all social and legal support".
She says a critical
factor in providing support is to create a public and private environment
that enables HIV positive women to live with their status. " I cannot
emphasis how important it is to have stigma reduction programmes.
This allows us to come out in the open and talk to some one who
can comfort you and help you get over the stress, someone to share
with. I opened up because when I got into this situation someone
opened to me. I think I would be dead. There is no one to talk to
you can get stressed up and have problems."
AIDS and
Women's failing rights
Women
and girls account for 58 percent of those living with HIV/AIDS in
sub-Saharan African countries like Zimbabwe that are deeply affected
by the pandemic. In some instances girls aged 15 to 19 years are
four to seven times more likely to be infected with HIV than boys
within the same age group.
This reflects
the low and oppressed status of women in Zimbabwe. While Zimbabwe's
women have paper rights enshrined in the National Gender Policy,
a fracture exists between policy and lived reality. The AIDS pandemic
has not only uncovered the very deeply ingrained sexual abuse, gender
violence and impoverishment that especially poor black women experience,
but it has also served to reinforce and provide new avenues of discriminating
women and showing that a critical gap between proclamations and
real change remains.
Sexist attitudes
and sinister patriarchal practices that privilege men have kept
women and poor, rural women in particular, in positions of deep
disadvantage. Not only has this made women more vulnerable to HIV
infection, but also forced women and girls into working as unpaid,
unrecognized home nurses carrying the burden of community based
care programmes.
The phenomenal
sacrifice women of the sub-region make in nursing the AIDS affected,
without appropriate training, equipment, food, water, firewood,
money, medications or recognition, is a stunning sign of service.
Yet it is also a form of exploitation that reveals the marginalisation
of women and girls in societies that accept that women are unequal
citizens who should be made to accept labour: washing soiled bedding
and clothing, whipping wounds and sores, burying the dead without
coffins, caring without knowledge or information or protection has
led to a trauma so deep it is difficult to see recovery of families
and communities from the burden.
AIDS, Women
and the Family
As her
husband's health deteriorated Chiwetani sent messages to his family
requesting support. The harsh advice that came back was: "Go and
stay in the village, near a grave," she says. The family did not
want, in the event of her husband's death, the responsibility of
moving his body from the city to the village where the funeral was
bound to be.
On July 23 2000,
while the rest of Zimbabwe was consumed by the headiness surrounding
the constitutional reform debate and parliamentary elections, Chiwetani's
husband died. "It happened in our house. When I sent a message to
his brother the words that came back were " Tell her I am waiting
for my wife to finish the laundry", she says.
In a short space
of time Chiwetani had gone from wife to widow. No sooner had her
husband's coffin been lowered into the grave that new difficulties
emerged. A tug-of-war surrounding property believed to belong to
the deceased put further strain on already mangled family relations.
HIV and AIDS
- The Experience of Widows
"When
I went home for the funeral, there was a lot of talk about how I
had killed my husband and made him sick", explains Chiwetani. "My
husband had amended his Will and reversed certain sections. The
Will had been stamped by his lawyers. The family was not very happy
that the children and I had been left with everything".
Bitter inheritance
disputes, that often leave widows and their children dispossessed
and may even result in fatalities, have been the subject of extensive
research by regional feminist networks such as the Women and Law
in Southern Africa Research and Education Trust, WLSA.
The network,
along with women's rights groups across the continent, has lobbied
for legislative reforms that protect the property and inheritance
rights of widows and children. AIDS Activists such as Chiwetani
have recently added their weight behind the demands for just inheritance
laws and legal practice before both civil and traditional courts.
"Zimbabwe's
inheritance laws are very clear: widows and children are the rightful
heirs to the deceased's estate, where there is a Will, its contents
are meant to be respected" Says Arnold Tsunga, Co-ordinator of Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR). "Yet more than half of all inheritance
disputes have women and girls as complainants. This is partly due
to the prejudice women and children encounter through sexist legal
practice and customary law that favours men as heirs."
Chiwetani couldn't
agree more. "Wills are very important. They prevent people from
grabbing property from widows at the time of need", she says about
the strategy that worked for her and her children. " Now that I
have my life and our network is growing, my main worry is treatment
for the women on whose behalf I have dedicated my life to".
Women and AIDS
Treatment Campaigns
With more
than half of the people living with HIV and AIDS being women, treatment
campaigns can no longer afford to sideline women's demands for appropriate
care through service centers that meet the very specific needs of
women.
As the UN's
World Health Organisation rolls out its "3 by 5" campaign, which
aims to have 3 million people on treatment by 2005, the momentum
steadily gathering in the region to demand treatments will need
to ensure that a significant number of the beneficiaries of treatment
are women and girls living with the HIV.
"Treatment is
something to do at all costs," says Jephias Mudondo, director of
the Family AIDS Counselling Trust (FACT). "People are dying unnecessarily.
The solution is political commitment. Commitment with action".
"Women are more
affected in a lot of ways. Even in infection by older men. Married
men go out get infected. A married woman is the most vulnerable
person. When positive carry all the burden. Poverty does not have
access to treatment in the country. We have a programme of volunteers
taking place. 600 volunteers only 10 are men. The rest are women.
Community care impacts on them. When they get ill who do they get
support from?"
AIDS and the
Ballot Box
It has
been both difficult and painful to comprehend the world's impassivity
when millions of women and girls continue to die of AIDS that has
come about as a consequence of gender discrimination. Any other
form of oppression would have caused massive outrage. The race,
sex and class factors that have for the past two and a half decades
allowed African women to die slowly, one at a time, from the casualty
and shame of AIDS cannot go ignored.
On the eve of
the National Conference on HIV and AIDS in Zimbabwe running June
15 to 18 women's rights activists are showing their collective indignation
at the deeply rooted gender and human rights violations that have
allowed the full horror of this mammoth plague to emerge. Not providing
early, affordable and accessible treatment, along with the resources
so necessary for the disease's elimination has proved to be extremely
costly and damaging.
As Zimbabwe
moves closer to Parliamentary Elections planned for March 2005,
which coincides with the 10th anniversary of the Beijing Fourth
World Conference of Women, AIDS is steadily graining momentum as
an issue of governance and democracy. Political will to tackle gender
segregation in the context of AIDS will determine which way the
millions of women whose lives have been rocked by the disease will
cross their voting cards. After all, women command 52% of the vote.
* Isabella
Matambanadzo is the Executive Director of the Zimbabwe Women's Resource
Centre and Network (ZWRCN) a gender and development organisation
that is committed to empowering women to make informed choices and
decisions.
Visit the ZWRCN
fact sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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