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ZIMBABWE:
HIV-positive farmworkers are forgotten
IRIN
News
October 03, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55818
HARARE - Little
is being done to provide treatment and care for Zimbabwean farmworkers
living with HIV/AIDS since the government launched its controversial
fast-track land redistribution programme in 2000.
Historically neglected,
the chaotic reform programme and a series of bad droughts has deepened
the vulnerability of the remaining farm labourers working the land.
On Bryne Farm,
about 55km west of the capital, Harare, Lloyd Munapo*, 39, was diagnosed
as HIV positive in 2001. He can no longer work and relies on his
wife, Anna*, to get by. She is also HIV-positive, but can still
join other labourers every morning in the fields.
"If she stays
behind taking care of me here, we will both die of hunger. The doctor
told me to eat healthy foods, so we have to work for it at all costs,"
said Munapo.
Due to the high
death rates on farms, owners now give workers as little time as
possible to bury loved ones or tend to the sick, claimed acting
president of the Zimbabwe Farmers' Union (ZFU), Jabulani Gwaringa.
"It's now very
common on most farms. If you give them [farmworkers] the whole day,
production will suffer. It's now only a handful of workers who attend
funerals these days, the rest will be working," said Gwaringa, who
owns a farm in Mashonaland East Province.
The 1,200ha Bryne
Farm, which produces maize, tobacco and cattle, was invaded by former
Masvingo provincial governor Josaya Hungwe in 2001, who dislodged
the previous owner, David Dobson. About 100 workers still live on
the farm.
Anna's monthly
earnings cannot cover Lloyd's life-prolonging antiretroviral (ARV)
drugs, costing between Z$20,000 (US$80) and Z$25,000 (US$100) a
month. The gazetted salary for farm labourers is Z$4,160 (US$16.6),
which cannot even buy five litres of cooking oil in a country with
an annual inflation rate of 1,200 percent.
Munapo has been
on the government waiting list for ARVs since 2001, but has grown
frustrated and no longer visits the nearest ARV distribution site
in Norton town, about 20km away. "They kept telling me to come the
following month and check, until I lost hope," he said.
He is not alone:
many farmworkers cannot access treatment or even basic healthcare
services, say rights groups. HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns seldom
target or reach poorly-educated farm labourers, allowing myths about
the disease to go unchallenged.
Gift Muti, deputy
secretary-general of the General Agriculture and Plantations Workers'
Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ), which represents the interests of about
400,000 farmworkers, said the living conditions of labourers often
made them even more vulnerable to the pandemic.
Although Bryne
farm has some workers' housing with cement floors and corrugated
iron roofing, most live in overcrowded, badly ventilated huts with
poor sanitation. The subsidised food rations they used to receive
from Dobson were cut soon after Hungwe took over, leaving some workers
without enough food.
"The problem is
that those who know that they are HIV-positive cannot afford ARVs
or the recommended nutritious foods. Some HIV-positive farmworkers
only have one meal a day," said Muti.
GAPWUZ distributes
condoms in farming communities and regularly holds workshops for
farmworkers, encouraging them to be tested for HIV. Despite these
initiatives the odds were still heavily stacked against farmworkers,
as risky sexual behaviour has persisted.
"There are a lot
of unwanted pregnancies and high [numbers of] cases of sexually
transmitted infections, clearly showing that they are not using
the condoms. A lot of them abuse drugs and alcohol," said Muti.
The Zimbabwe Business
Council on AIDS (ZBCA), a coalition of private companies, is undertaking
a survey in cooperation with GAPWUZ to establish the extent of HIV/AIDS
on commercial and communal farms.
Muti said the
general welfare of farmworkers deteriorated after the land invasions
in 2001, which displaced white commercial farmers and their workers.
The new owners, mostly black Zimbabweans, lack the financial muscle
to take care of their workers.
Wilson Nyabonda,
president of the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers' Union (ZCFU), warned
that the high prevalence of HIV/AIDS on farms could no longer be
ignored, and called for the development of a national programme
to address the crisis. "If we fold our arms, the gains of the land
revolution will not be noticed," he told PlusNews.
* Not their real
names
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