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Five
year plan to battle HIV/AIDS on farms launched
IRIN News
November 16, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56402
HARARE - Zimbabwe's
government is launching a five-year plan to combat HIV/AIDS in the
agricultural sector after realising the impact of the pandemic on
farming.
The initiative,
'Zimbabwe Agricultural Sector Strategy on HIV and AIDS ' - coordinated
by the agriculture ministry, with support by the UN Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) and other nongovernmental organisations (NGOs)
- is seeking to mobilise financial and human resources to halt the
spread of the disease on farms, reduce stigma against people living
with HIV/AIDS, fight gender inequality and domestic violence, and
facilitate treatment for infected people.
The agriculture
ministry, which concedes that it has lacked a clear policy on HIV/AIDS,
intends to establish an agricultural management information system
to monitor various issues related to health and service delivery,
and accurately assess the cost of HIV/AIDS to farming communities
and the extent to which farmworkers and agricultural-sector employees
are vulnerable to the disease.
According to the
Zimbabwe Demographic and Health Survey, 18.1 percent of sexually
active adult people in a population of about 11.5 million are infected
with HIV - the sixth highest prevalence in the world.
"HIV and AIDS
is affecting personnel from the agricultural sub-sectors, that is,
the ministry of agriculture and its departments, the parastatals
under the ministry, private-sector providers, the farming community
and agri-business. Therefore, the integrity of the sector should
be protected against the impact of HIV and AIDS. In the absence
of a strategy, the agricultural-sector response to HIV and AIDS
has been erratic and uncoordinated," the ministry said in a statement.
Vulnerability
in the agriculture sector was heightened by factors such as worker
migrations during harvests, which led to long periods away from
their families when they often stayed at centres that "have been
identified as hotspots for HIV infection".
"The Ministry
of Agriculture and its departments, parastatals and commercial farms
have experienced an increase in absenteeism of staff due to illness,
attendance of funerals and the need to care for the sick," the ministry
commented.
More disturbingly,
there has been a "decline in crop varieties, and changes in cropping
patterns, as high labour-demanding cash crops may be abandoned",
with subsistence farmers being forced to sell cattle and donkeys
used for draught power to meet care and treatment expenses.
Around 70 percent
of the population depends on agriculture, which provides more than
60 percent of the raw materials used in the manufacturing sector
and contributes up to 45 percent of the country's exports.
Low literacy levels
in farming communities, caused by a shortage of farm schools, made
it difficult to communicate anti-AIDS messages effectively, while
"poor housing conditions on commercial farms and in research station
compounds result in overcrowding and a breakdown of social norms,
... [which] encourages risky sexual behaviour."
Government's response
to HIV/AIDS in the sector has been limited to appointing people
to a few positions in the agriculture ministry's headquarters in
the capital, Harare, and provincial offices, who merely hand out
condoms and basic information without any clear strategy.
The fight against
HIV/AIDS in agriculture has been carried out mainly by community-based
nongovernmental organisations, farmers' unions and HIV/AIDS service
organisations, some of whom have established nutrition and herbal
gardens, and community fields for infected and affected people.
Gift Muti, deputy
secretary-general of the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers
Union (GAPWUZ), which represents some of Zimbabwe's 400,000 farmworkers,
welcomed the "positive" initiative, but cited poverty as one of
the main reasons for the spread of HIV/AIDS.
"From even before
independence [in 1980], farm workers have tended to be poorly paid
and live in abject poverty. This makes it easy for them to be infected
because women are easily forced into prostitution, while sex is
the main source of entertainment, since farm owners only provide
them with beerhalls," Muti told IRIN.
Muti, whose poorly
funded organisation distributes food to sick farmworkers, said it
was common for girls younger than 18 years to marry, while divorce
and extra-marital affairs were run of the mill among farmworkers.
Since the government
launched its fast-track land reform programme in 2000, in which
farmland was redistributed from white farmers to landless blacks,
Zimbabwe's economy has gone into freefall. An annual inflation rate
hovering around 1,000 percent has seen unemployment rise above 70
percent, while shortages of foreign currency have caused food, fuel
and electricity to become scarce commodities.
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