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South
Africa-Zimbabwe: No documents? No treatment
IRIN News
March 28, 2008 http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77493
Johannesburg - Linda*
was already sick when she arrived in Johannesburg from Zimbabwe,
but she did not know her HIV status. After months of sleeping rough
in a park her health deteriorated further and she finally plucked
up the courage to go for an HIV test at an inner-city clinic.
"I had to wait for
two weeks to get the results and I did not get counseling,"
Linda recalled. "The nurse who gave me the results told me,
'Here are your results; you are HIV positive, you can go and die.
You do not have papers, we can not help you.'"
Johannesburg, South Africa's
largest and wealthiest city, has been attracting hopeful new residents
since gold was discovered here more than a century ago. People from
all over the African continent, many fleeing conflict and poverty,
continue to flock to the City of Gold in search of a better life.
They are often disappointed.
"When I came here,
I was hoping to get a job and take care of my children, especially
this one who is sick of the deadly disease [HIV]," said Linda,
who came to Johannesburg five years ago. "I was thinking, let
me go to Johannesburg because it is a place of gold. But it is not
easy to get that gold; even if you dig and dig you will not get
it."
For undocumented migrants
like Linda, Johannesburg can be a hostile place. Inner city neighborhoods
like Hillbrow, where about half the residents are non-South Africans,
are already bursting at the seams and battling high levels of poverty
and crime. Newcomers face suspicious locals, exploitative work situations
- if they find work at all - and limited access to essential public
services.
Right
to healthcare rarely recongised
South
Africa's constitution states that "everyone" has the right
to access healthcare, but in reality there are limits for people
like Linda who can't produce a South African ID book. Public health
facilities in South Africa are obliged to provide emergency care
to anyone who needs it and illegal immigrants can usually access
HIV tests and even some basic treatment of opportunistic infections
at no cost. But when it comes to antiretroviral therapy (ART), the
only proven way to prolong the life of someone living with HIV,
they are routinely turned away.
Research conducted last
year by the Forced Migration Studies Programme at the University
of Witwatersrand on migrants' access to ART in Johannesburg found
that public health facilities were referring HIV-positive foreign
nationals to a handful of nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) that
provide treatment, creating a "dual-health care system".
In September 2007, the
Department of Health issued a revenue directive stating that refugees
and asylum seekers - with or without documentation - were eligible
for free ART. But the researchers found that the directive had not
filtered down to the clerks, receptionists and nurses who act as
the gatekeepers of public health services.
"Frontline staff
... didn't seem to have knowledge of the memo; they would indicate
that the policy at their institution was that they had to turn people
away. A lot of staff found this frustrating," said Jo Veary,
one of the researchers.
Linda eventually found
her way to a shelter where she heard about a support group for HIV-positive
migrants run by Mthwakazi Arts and Culture, a local NGO that mainly
assists Zimbabwean migrants. Mthwakazi referred her to Nazareth
House, a Catholic mission in the inner-city neighbourhood of Yeoville
that, with funding from the US President's Emergency Fund for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR), provides ART to anyone who needs it, regardless
of their legal status. Of about 800 patients getting treatment at
Nazareth House, the majority are non-South Africans.
Migrants
flooding health system?
Linda's
circuitous route to treatment took time, which not all migrants
living with AIDS have. More than 1,000 homeless people, most of
them Zimbabwean immigrants, bed down on the floor of the Central
Methodist Church in Johannesburg's inner city every night. "Many
of them are HIV positive, some of them are very weak. I must tell
you we've lost a large number of people to AIDS," said Paul
Verryn, bishop of the church.
According to Verryn,
HIV-positive migrants' experiences of trying to access care vary
considerably depending on where they go. Many described state-run
Johannesburg Hospital as one of the facilities most likely to turn
away patients without documents or to charge them excessive fees.
The hospital's CEO, Sagie
Pillay, told IRIN/PlusNews that non-South African citizens without
documentation were not turned away, but that they had to pay for
non-emergency care. "Fifteen percent of our patients are foreign
and the numbers are growing so we have to be careful. Health systems
all over Africa are crumbling so if we advertise the fact we can
provide care, the whole of Africa is going to be here," he
said.
Based on the research
she did, Veary said the notion that foreign nationals seeking treatment
were flooding the healthcare system was a myth. Most of the migrants
interviewed for the study only discovered they were HIV-positive
after arriving in the country.
The idea that migrants'
unstable living situations make them a "flight risk" for
starting life-long ART was another myth, according to the study
findings. "Many have actually been in South Africa for a long
time, they're well-established and they want to get well,"
Veary said. "We found adherence among non-citizens was about
the same as among citizens."
Zimbabweans make up the
largest number of undocumented migrants in Johannesburg. The country's
economic meltdown has resulted in shortages of basic commodites,
the highest inflation rate in the world, 80 percent unemployment
as well as a crumbling health system which has only been able to
dispense antiretroviral (ARV) drugs to about 91,000 of the 321,000
people who need them, according to the World Health Organisation.
But of the thousands
of Zimbabweans who duck fences, cross rivers and hide in the back
of trucks to reach Johannesburg every month, Verryn believes few
make the journey because they're looking for better health services.
"Many of them are here because they are threatened politically.
Some come because they just can't make it, particularly in Zimbabwe,
financially."
Long
wait for documentation
Wilson
Moyo* came to Johannesburg in 2006, leaving behind a comfortable
life as a white-collar worker in Zimbabwe after his political activities
made him feel his life was in danger. He decided to test for HIV
soon after arriving, not because he was sick, he said, but because
he wanted to be "in a position to protect myself".
After learning he was
HIV positive, he was referred to Hillbrow Clinic where a clerk asked
to see his ID. "When I said I didn't have any ID, they said,
'go and bring it'. I couldn't explain further because I knew I wouldn't
get anywhere," he said. "After that I was disappointed,
because I'd thought about it and found that this was not the end
of the road, there was still life after HIV. The best thing was
to fight on and get treatment and continue living a normal life,
but the problem was how to get the proper documentation to get treatment."
According to South African
law, refugees and asylum-seekers have the same rights to access
free health care as citizens. Although they still sometimes experience
difficulties exercising those rights, documented asylum seekers
are generally able to access ART through public health facilities.
The problem is obtaining that documentation.
South Africa's Department
of Home Affairs has a backlog of about 50,000 asylum-seeker applications.
Everyday, thousands of people queue outside the department's Refugee
Reception Office in Pretoria, 50 kilometres north of Johannesburg.
In an effort to keep their place in the queue, many are there for
several days and nights with no access to running water, toilets
or shelter.
"I once slept there
for three days, having nothing to eat and without having washed,"
said Wilson. "The last day, when I was number eight in the
queue, I was pulled out by these guys who were getting bribes from
people. They said I should give them R100 (US$12) to be in that
queue, which I didn't have."
A year and a half after
testing positive, Wilson had yet to be examined by a doctor to determine
his eligibility for ARV treatment. Still homeless and jobless, he
was trying to raise enough money through piece work to return to
the Refugee Reception Office in Pretoria.
"I think maybe they
could relax the rules for people with our disease," he said.
"If they could make it easier for us to access these documents,
then it would make our lives more bearable."
Demand
for government action
In
March 2008, a number of organisations from the AIDS and legal sectors
made a joint submission to South Africa's National AIDS Council
(SANAC), highlighting the vulnerability of migrants who fail to
access HIV-related information and services.
"We have found that
our protective legal framework is not being applied uniformly,"
the submission stated. "Public hospitals, clinics and other
institutions appear to be unilaterally creating policies which deny
refugees access to health care services."
The submission urged
SANAC to launch a campaign to educate health care workers about
the rights of migrants and the reasons why they seek refuge in South
Africa. It also asked for an investigation into the conditions outside
Refugee Reception Offices and at facilities where undocumented migrants
are detained before being deported. It cited a police raid on the
Central Methodist Church in January in which approximately 500 Zimbabweans
were arrested. According to the submission, a number of HIV-positive
detainees were not given sufficient food and water and went without
medication or treatment.
According to Fatima Hassan,
an attorney with the AIDS Law Project, one of the organisations
that made the submission, the health department has yet to acknowledge
receiving it.
In response to questions
from IRIN/PlusNews about the rights of migrants to access HIV/AIDS
services, head of the health department's HIV/AIDS unit, Dr Nomunde
Xundu wrote that South Africa's national strategic HIV/AIDS plan
"is a programme for the prevention, treatment and care of South
Africans, including people who are in the country legally".
Hassan was perplexed
by the response, which she said contradicted both the constitution
and the department's own directives. "[The health department]
hasn't put any contingency plan in place," she said. "They
know large numbers of people are coming from Zimbabwe because there
are no ARVs there, but they haven't given hospitals the budget to
provide [them with] ARVs."
The ALP has also made
a submission opposing a proposed amendment to South Africa's 1998
Refugee Act that would remove the right of refugees to access public
health services.
*Not their
real names
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