CONFIRMED HIV positive South Africans that volunteer to be marked near
their genital area with a tatoo depicting their status, will in
addition to free counselling and medication. be paid an equivalent of
N840, 000 (50 000 Rands) each, according to a bill newly signed by
President Jacob Zuma.
The bill, according to a report by Radio
City, a local South African radio station, is widely regarded as one of
the greatest steps in the history of combating the HIV/AIDS epidemic in
the country which has the highest HIV prevalence in Africa.
Zuma
who is reported to to have volunteered to be the first South African
citizen to get hisHIV status tatted near his genitals, however
announced that only the first 10 million people (who already tested
positive) to volunteer to have their HIV statuses tatted on their
genitals would be given the money in form of a funeral expense voucher.
After signing the bill, Zuma was quoted as saying: “The mark is to
protect those who can’t say no to sex. I mean if you can’t read between
the lines you should read between the legs because that’s where the
status would be tatted.
“The choice to be HIV positive is now in
your hands or your genitals for that matter…. We also encourage those
who had been living with the virus to go to the nearest public hospitals
to get their status tatted in,” he noted.
South Africa has the
world’s highest HIV caseload and premature deaths of 300,000 people. The
government is distributing life-prolonging anti-retroviral drugs to
people infected with the virus.
Particularly, HIV-positive
infants and children under one year obtain free ARVs, while pregnant
women and patients with tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS with CD4 cell counts
below 350 are treated free.
In 2006, Zuma faced charges of raping
an HIV-positive family friend, and was ridiculed for testifying that he
took a shower after sex to lower the risk of infection with HIV. His
determination to help millions South Africans infected with HIV and
around 60,000 babies born HIV infected each year.
“Let there be
no more shame, no more blame, no more discrimination and no more stigm.
Let the politicisation and endless debates about HIV and AIDS stop,”
Zuma noted.
Many factors contribute to the wide spread of HIV in
the country. These include: poverty; inequality and social instability;
high levels of sexually transmitted infections; the low status of women;
sexual violence; high mobility (particularly migrant labour); limited
and uneven access to quality medical care; and a history of poor
leadership in the response to the epidemic.
HIV and AIDS
estimates by UNAIDS (2013), show that the number of people living with
HIV in South Africa averages 6.3 million. Adults aged 15 to 49 have
average prevalence rate of 19.1 percent while youths aged 15 and above
living with HIV number 5.9 million.
Women aged 15 and above
living with HIV number 3. 5 million while children aged 0 to 14 living
with the virus are 3.6 million in number.
Total deaths due to
AIDS range between 170,000 – 220,000, while an estimated 2.4 million
orphans aged 0 to 17 months due to AIDS are on record.
By Sola Ogundipe, source-vanguard
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