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Polls
and HIV/Aids: Should MPs be tested?
Davison Maruziva, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
June 03, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200706030078.html
AS concerns mount over
the possible collapse of Africa's democratic project under a complex
wave of impacts introduced by the HIV and AIDS pandemic, Zimbabwe's
main political parties fear they could be providing a hostage to
fortune by insisting on testing.
They are thus reluctant
to introduce compulsory testing. Several MPs tested for HIV last
year and all but three declared their results - they were negative.
It is thought had the
results been positive, they might not have been so forthcoming with
their declarations.
On average Zimbabwe holds
about four by-elections a year due the death of a sitting MP.
Recent research conducted
in six countries - five of them in the region - attributes the reluctance
to come out in the open to fears of a premature or disastrous end
to political careers.
Nelson Chamisa and Gabriel
Chaibva, spokespersons of the two MDC factions, last week said requiring
prospective candidates to declare their health status had not been
discussed thoroughly.
"That thinking,"
said Chamisa, "has not had thorough debate."
Chaibva, although citing
issues of confidentiality, said political parties needed to put
in place a mechanism to tackle this growing problem. He cited the
case of a Chitungwiza candidate who died a day after his nomination.
Blessing Chebundo (MDC),
MP for Kwekwe, is chairperson of the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee
on Health. He said of particular importance were the preventative
and mitigatory measures.
He cited the issue of
truckers, saying once they were identified as one of the prime elements
in the spread of HIV and Aids, subsequent measures to scale up awareness
and the provision of treatment, which prolongs life, were put in
place for them.
"There was some
thinking along those lines for teachers and nurses, some time ago,"
he said, "but that was dropped because we need a holistic approach.
"The issue is no
different from doctors, whose training we invest in for seven years
. . . or soldiers. But there is also the issue of human rights for
the prospective candidates, because, globally, we are not agreed
that HIV and Aids is a notifiable disease."
Dr Nathan Shamuyarira,
the Zanu PF spokesperson, was unavailable for comment despite repeated
calls.
HIV/Aids was the first
disease to be labelled a global security threat by the United Nations
Security Council. It was the first to command discussion by the
entire Security Council.
The National
Association of Non-governmental Organisations (Nango), the umbrella
co-ordinating agency for non-governmental organisations, said starting
with next year's election they would demand that people be open
with their health status.
Fambai Ngirande, the
Advocacy and Communications manager at Nango, said: "Anyone
who does not declare their status and is not pushing the agenda
should not be voted into office. We are concerned at the rate at
which people are increasingly being disempowered. There is no political
will to serve people who are living with or are affected by HIV
and Aids."
Candidates coming out
in the open about their health status would stand a better chance
of being voted in, he said, because they were likely to push for
the improvement of the lives of people living with HIV and Aids.
But Uganda's President
Yoweri Museveni exploited the condition of his opponent by suggesting
that voting for the opposition candidate was "voting for a
dead candidate", delegates to a conference in Cape Town, South
Africa last week heard. Museveni's argument was that there was no
place for people living with HIV and Aids in leadership.
Professor Nana Poku from
Bradford University, United Kingdom, presented a counter perspective,
arguing that a candidate who declared their HIV/Aids status could
re-energise how societies viewed people living with HIV and Aids.
He said they could draw
more support because they would be counted on to pursue the scaling
up of anti-retroviral drugs and care for those affected.
In the end, they would
constitute an effective counter to the stigma and discrimination
against people living with HIV and Aids.
Researchers from the
Institute for Democracy in South Africa (Idasa) found that in Malawi,
for example, 42 MPs had died at the height of the pandemic between
1994 and 2006.
An official statement
by the then Speaker of Malawi's National Assembly in 2000 disclosed
that 28 MPs had died of HIV/Aids-related complications.
"There
is a declining trend," say the researchers, "which might
be explained by the increased availability of anti-retroviral drugs
in the late 1990s and since MPs will be in the higher middle class
to upper economic bracket, with access to medical schemes."
In demonstrating the
rising numbers of legislators dying before completing their terms
due to the possible influence of the HIV and Aids pandemic in Zambia,
the researchers say between 1964 and 1984 (the period before the
advent of Aids) 46 by-elections were held, 14 of them a result of
death by illness and accidents combined.
By comparison, from 1985
to February 2003,102 by-elections were held and 59 were due to HIV
and Aids-related deaths.
Idasa's Governance and
Aids programme manager, Kondwani Chirambo, says research in Zambia
showed that the frequent deaths of MPs and other political representatives
due to illness had become common only in the last
10-15 years.
"As a result,"
Chirambo said, "the number of by-elections generated by the
natural deaths of incumbent MPs and councillors has also increased
during the same period.
"While only 6.4%
of the 46 by-elections between 1964 and 1984 were caused by MPs
succumbing to natural deaths, the number rose dramatically between
1985 and 2005: in that period about 60% of the 146 by-elections
were due to deaths of incumbent MPs . . . "
There is much concern
over the cost of organising and conducting elections, lack of representation
and development and unquantifiable frustration for the voters.
In Zambia, a by-election
in a large constituency will cost up to US$200 000, while in Tanzania
it is US$500 000.Lesotho forked out US$130 000 for each by-election
since 2002.
Chirambo said one of
the negative impacts of HIV and AIDS on countries was lack of carefully
crafted policy responses, because countries would have lost people
with skills.
It was not uncommon to
find that countries either failed to submit key documents or presented
partially completed reports, for example, for negotiations with
international financial institutions.
Electoral management
bodies would be affected in their ability to organise and conduct
elections more efficiently because of loss of skilled personnel,
while parliaments could witness power shifts arising from HIV and
AIDS induced by-elections.
Political parties would
suffer from the impact of the loss of members either in leadership
positions, people with organisational capabilities, while membership
would be affected in their participation in the electoral process
because of either their own health status or because they have to
tend to relatives living with HIV or AIDS and do not have time to
register as voters, verify the voters' roll and go out to vote.
The political cost is
that small opposition parties were disadvantaged because they did
not have as much funding as ruling parties, which have access to
government funds.
In Zimbabwe, the larger
opposition parties do have access to government funds.
One question arising
from the weaknesses wrought by HIV and AIDS is whether it is not
time for the "first past the post" system to be modified,
which would mean either waiving the requirement for by-elections
or adopting a proportional representation system.
But proportional representation
has its own drawbacks which stem from concerns about poor accountability,
as MPs will not be directly elected by voters.
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