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Economic
security for women key to HIV prevention
UN AIDS
March 08, 2006
http://www.unaids.org/en/MediaCentre/PressMaterials/FeatureStory/20060308-economicsecurity.asp
A new paper
published today by the UNAIDS-led Global Coalition on Women and
AIDS (GCWA) shows that when women have an income and a safe place
to live, they are much better able to negotiate abstinence, fidelity,
and safer sex. Economic security, the paper stresses, is a major
factor in enabling women to protect themselves from HIV.
Today, however,
of the 1.2 billion people living on less than US $1 a day, 70% are
women. They also represent almost half of all people living with
HIV globally.
When women are
economically and financially dependent on male partners and family
members, their bargaining power over sexual matters can be reduced,
making them more vulnerable to HIV. Where women lack property rights,
they suffer restricted economic options, reduced personal security,
poverty, violence, and homelessness. Poverty can also encourage
risky livelihood measures, such as enduring an abusive relationship
or engaging in unsafe sex in exchange for money, housing, food or
education.
Women whose
partners fall sick and die, particularly of AIDS, frequently suffer
discrimination, abandonment, and violence. In some regions, when
their husband dies, women can lose their homes, inheritance, possessions,
and livelihood. "My husband's family took farm equipment, livestock,
cooking pans, bank records, pension documents, house utensils, blankets
and clothes
They said they had bought me [with a dowry] and
therefore I had no voice in that home" says Emily Owino of
Kenya.
With sick children,
and no money to buy food or clothes, Emily went to stay with her
own family. When she came back to take up residence in her marital
home, she discovered that her land and her last few possessions
had been taken. "I was destitute," she says.
To help women
like Emily, the UNAIDS-led Global Coalition works on securing women's
property rights. In 2005, it initiated a small grants programme
to support nine organizations in sub-Saharan Africa that are implementing
innovative projects to advance women's property rights in the context
of HIV and AIDS.
The Zimbabwe
Widows and Orphans Trust (ZWOT) is one such organization. "The
widows who come to ZWOT have absolutely nothing" says founder
Susan Zwinoira. "Their morale is low and they have no resources.
They often come to us looking for legal assistance. We start by
getting as much information as we can from the widow and then we
determine which route is best to follow. Negotiations with the family
are sometimes successful. But where they fail, matters can end up
with the police, in court
Every Tuesday and Thursday we receive
a welcoming reception. We have even started to call them "Widows'
days".
Another grant
recipient is the Rwanda Women's Network. Its Director Mary Balikungeri
explains: "The Network was established in 1995 to support widows
and orphans who survived the genocide. We started a low-cost housing
project for widows and constructed about 200 houses all over the
country which are now occupied by widows. We are also promoting
nutritional gardening. Each woman who was given a small house has
a small gardening plot but it is too small. We plan to negotiate
with local authorities to provide us with a collective farming plot."
Securing property
and inheritance rights for women and girls has clear value in HIV
prevention. Many promising initiatives are using microfinance and
skills training to improve women's access to economic assets, such
as land, property and credit, and to reduce their vulnerability
to HIV.
Read the Global
Coalition on Women and AIDS Issues Brief on Property Rights Media
AIDS response
Related links
Global
Coalition on Women and AIDS
Zimbabwe Widows and
Orphans Trust
Rwanda
Women's Network
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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