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Activists shout from the sidelines
PlusNews
October 08, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80819
The new board
of Zimbabwe's National
AIDS Council (NAC) has a glaring omission: not one member is
living openly with the HI-virus. AIDS activists have slammed the
move, describing it as "discriminatory" and a step backwards
in the fight against the epidemic.
The NAC was established
in 1999 to coordinate and facilitate Zimbabwe's multi-sectoral response
to HIV/AIDS, and the board makes some of the country's most important
decisions affecting the welfare of those living with HIV.
When the board's term
expired recently, Zimbabwe's health minister, David Parirenyatwa,
re-appointed seven previous board members and named four new ones,
including the director of the Zimbabwe Business Council on AIDS;
a gospel singer, and a member of the Traditional Medical Practitioners
Council.
Martha Tolana
of the Zimbabwe
AIDS Network, an umbrella body for over 400 non-governmental
organisations, who is openly living with HIV, raised concerns about
the exclusion from the board of HIV-positive people, or anyone from
a member organisation of the AIDS Network.
"The advantage of
placing people like us, who are living with HIV, in strategic places
such as the NAC board is that we are better able to articulate the
issues that affect other HIV-positive Zimbabweans, because we experience
them too," she told IRIN/PlusNews.
Joao Zangarati of the
Grassroots Movement of People Living with HIV/AIDS warned that no
response could succeed without the meaningful involvement of people
who were directly affected.
"We are only remembered
when there is a workshop to be held, and the organizers want to
use our testimonies and life stories to record and take to donors
for funding," he commented.
"After that we are
forgotten, and remembered again when it suits these organisations.
It is very unfortunate really. There can't be any meaningful interventions
without the guidance of us people living with HIV and the sooner
policy-makers realise this, the better for all of us," Zangarati
said.
NAC director Dr Tapuwa
Magure said there had been no deliberate attempt to sideline people
living with HIV, and alleged that the "fragmented" AIDS
network organisations had failed to "speak with one voice"
and agree on the names of people to be put forward to sit on the
board.
"The ministry of
health and child welfare wrote to AIDS network organisations and
requested names of people living with HIV to be included on the
board, but there is a lot of infighting and we haven't received
any names," he told IRIN/PlusNews.
Nevertheless,
Otto Saki, the programmes coordinator of Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), pointed out that "it is
not too late" for the minister of health and child welfare
to include HIV-positive representatives on the board.
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