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Undocumented
immigrants living with HIV refused medication in South Africa
Nqaba
Ndlovu
March 06, 2012
A Zimbabwean
woman living with HIV had to be 'rescued- from jail
in South Africa after spending the entire weekend without access
to her medication.
Mai Tawanda
was arrested and detained at the Maitland Refugee Reception Centre
for being an 'illegal- or undocumented immigrant.
People Against
Suffering Oppression and Poverty (PASSOP) intervened after police
ignored Tawanda-s pleas for antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) to
be delivered.
The South African
constitution guarantees asylum seekers, refugees and undocumented
immigrants access to health care services.
But civil society
organizations are campaigning for a more humane way of dealing with
deportees living with HIV that would minimize disruptions to their
treatment.
Treatment Action
Campaign says that treatment interruption can have serious health
implications. A person could develop a strain of HIV that is resistant
to their ARVs. Resistance occurs when the virus mutates and reproduces
so that one or more drug is no longer effective.
According to
the International Organization for Migration, over 10,000 Zimbabweans
have been deported since a moratorium on deportations was lifted
in October 2011. Due to the manner in which these deportations are
carried out, it is feared that many deportees living with HIV could
default or abandon treatment.
Paul Foreman,
Head of Mission in Zimbabwe for Médicins Sans Frontières,
said in the October 2011 People-s Magazine article 'Zimbabweans
cast out to die-: "About 300,000 people are on ART [antiretroviral
treatment] in Zimbabwe according to the Global Fund, but over 600,000
qualify for ART based on the World Health Organization-recommended
CD4 count threshold of 350."
Deported Zimbabweans
living with HIV have to join a waiting list for medication, with
the fragile health system already under severe strain.
The country
recently emerged from a cholera epidemic in 2008, but is now faced
with a typhoid outbreak that threatens to be on the same scale.
In this regard, deportees sent back to Zimbabwe face a very real
risk of death.
Even in cases
where people living with HIV have made contingency plans, it is
impossible to have two-to-four weeks- stock of ARVs on their
person all the time. Deportations are sudden and law enforcement
agencies often will not allow detainees access to their medication.
Even if they do, medication might run out while they are still in
detention.
Though most
patients take their medication religiously, they may not be able
to recall whether they are on d4T or AZT, nevirapine or efavirenz,
3TC or NNRTI. Referral letters are critical as they specify the
regimen the person living with HIV is on to ensure continuation
of the same regimen in the home country.
Sbusiso, a Zimbabwean
person living with HIV in Johannesburg, claims to have bribed his
way out of Lindela Repatriation Centre after being detained for
two days without access to his ARVs. He is undocumented and faced
deportation back to Zimbabwe.
Sbusiso-s
medication is couriered to him by his mother through the informal
courier network known as omalayisha from St. Luke-s Catholic
Hospital in rural Matabeleland in Zimbabwe, over 1200 kilometres
away.
He insists that
as an undocumented immigrant, this arrangement serves him better
because he doesn-t bother anyone and there is less risk of
being 'discovered- by law enforcement agents.
When he was bed-ridden, his friends took him home and he was lucky
to get immediate access to ARVs at St Luke-s. Nine months
later, he was back in Johannesburg and his boss at a Greek restaurant
in the suburbs took him back immediately.
Langton Mariyoga,
an official at PASSOP, has called for "a humane process of
deportation that considers the plight of HIV/AIDS deportees".
His organization
will push the South African government to ensure the protection
of people living with HIV and other vulnerable groups of deportees
during the deportation process.
Mariyoga said:
"We believe that this is not the time to deport people back
to Zimbabwe, thus we are completely opposed to deportations of people
with HIV/AIDS to Zimbabwe."
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