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High
risk behaviour: the forgotten Vapositori of Southern Africa
Thuletu Hanene, HealthDev.net
June 11, 2009
http://healthdev.net/site/post.php?s=5404
The Vapositori religious
sect originally from Zimbabwe, is one of the groups following high
risky behaviour but has been largely forgotten in the response to
HIV.
This group is closely
knit and strongly grounded within its tradition and belief systems
making it difficult for most AIDS service providers in southern
Africa to target its members with AIDS prevention messages.
The Vapositori
are found in most parts of the region including Zimbabwe, Malawi,
Botswana, South Africa and Zambia. They are also found in East African
countries such as Kenya and Tanzania. The group has even expanded
to parts of Europe and United States.
The religious sect is practicing what researchers have proved to
be the driving forces of the HIV epidemic here in Southern Africa
including early marriages, polygamy, multiple concurrent partnerships
(MCP), unsafe sex and transgenerational sex.
To make matters worse,
members of the group don't seek any medical attention once they
have fallen sick nor do their women attend antenatal clinics when
pregnant making it difficult to track the HIV prevalence within
the group. They continue to miss out on other health services such
as check-ups for cancer, TB or sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
including HIV.
Most important of all,
is that they are well known cross border or inter-city traders,
who use the normal buses and trucks to travel between countries
in the region. They usually spend more than a week at trading markets
in most of the countries they do business.
I have been in the HIV
sector since 1999 and I don't recall any international or local
NGO that has included the Vapositori in its AIDS awareness campaigns
nor do I know if there are any who are prepared to include them
in the near future.
This will have a negative
effect not only on the general population but to PLHIV as some of
their members have been enrolled on TB treatment and ART. They have
never been educated on positive prevention since they are not willing
to take part in activities by other PLHIV at the clinics they receive
their drugs. As a result, they continue to miss opportunities to
receive education on re-infection and treatment adherence.
When the project "Corridors
of Hope" began in southern Africa, this group was supposed
to be one of its target beneficiaries, yet no one thought about
it. It 's a pity that more than 25 years into the HIV pandemic,
this group still remains forgotten.
I recently attended
the burial of one of my uncles who was a member of this sect. He
is survived by six wives, five known MCP now popularly referred
as small houses, the youngest wife being 19 years. He inherited
over 10 spouses from his late eight brothers and had a number of
unknown previous relationships with girlfriends not only here in
Zambia but also in Botswana, Malawi, South Africa and Zimbabwe.
He was able to take care
of all his wives before he got sick but he was sick for almost three
years before he died and most of his wives became cross border traders
during his long illness. It is most probable that most of them could
have been involved in both transactional or transgenerational sex
which is so common among this religious sect. Most of their girl
children are married off as soon as they reach puberty which can
be between 11 - 15 years.
I suspect that this uncle
of mine died of AIDS related illness but I can't say for sure if
he was HIV positive, as he never went to any health centre during
the 3 years of his long illness. That was due to the fact that his
church doesn't allow its members to seek medical services but I
know that he lost three wives to possibly AIDS related illness in
the last five years. His late wives never received any medical attention
as well.
Those of us involved
in the AIDS response are completely ignoring this group not realising
that they are a threat not only to their fellow church members but
also to our children, especially school girls who travel by bus
both locally or provincially. Most members of this group are employed
as taxi, buses or truck drivers and they are economically well even
during this global financial crisis.
They belong to a few
groups of working people that can afford to abuse alcohol and other
drugs, pay for sex usually unsafe sex as most of them have never
been educated about the importance of condom use to prevent HIV,
avoid re-infection for those already infected. Their religion doesn't
encourage condom use.
It's up to all of us
as AIDS and TB activists to start a campaign on how to reach members
of this group who are still living as if they are in the pre-HIV
era. Groups such as NAC, ZINGO, NZP+, TALC, local and international
NGOs as well as PLHIV should start engaging members of this group
during AIDS awareness campaigns.
I challenge those implementing
HIV programs in areas where the Vapositori sect live to find ways
to include them in activities not only here in Zambia but in other
countries in Sub-Saharan Africa because as long as they are not
part of the response to HIV, we will never succeed. They continue
to die because of suspected AIDS related illness which can be easily
managed by the local clinics.
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