Communities usually stand together when
faced with wars or natural disasters, but in South Africa, civil
society and government have been at loggerheads over HIV/Aids virtually
since the ANC took office in 1994. The situation has deteriorated since
Mbeki became president. In April 2002 the government, realising it was
losing support because of its handling of the epidemic, issued a
statement acknowledging the efficacy of anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs)
and offering free ARVs to rape survivors. This seemed to augur a new
united front against the disease, but tension is once again mounting
over the government’s apparent reluctance to make ARVs available in the
public sector, as well as its continued association with Aids
dissidents. In February 2003 the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC)
organised a mass protest march to coincide with the opening of
parliament. It was supported by over 10 000 people. When Mbeki refused
even to acknowledge them, the TAC angrily announced that it would
embark on a defiance campaign until the government made an unequivocal
commitment to a public-sector ARV programme and finalised a national
prevention and treatment plan with Nedlac. The government does have an
HIV/Aids strategy, but it is a broad set of guidelines rather than an
operational plan, and its implementation is very uneven. Nevertheless,
progress is being made. The budget allocation has been increased from
R342 million in 2001/2 to R3,6 billion in 2005/6. By the end of 2003,
400 million condoms will have been distributed, and 658 hospitals and
clinics now offer ARVs to pregnant women and their newborn babies.
However, it should be remembered that the mother-to-child programme was
fully implemented only after the TAC brought court action against the
health minister. Richard Feachem, head of the global Fund to Fight
Aids, TB and Malaria, was here recently to sign grant agreements worth
over R300 million. He found many positive signs and said he was
confident that it was not a question of if, but when, the public sector
began to deliver ARVs. However, he learned that nothing can be taken
for granted concerning the government’s stance on Aids: the signing
never took place. It was stalled because the government wanted to clear
up some ‘technicalities’ first. In the meantime, communities around the
country still refuse to confront HIV/Aids openly, the death toll is
mounting, and actuaries predict that life expectancy by 2010 will be
around 36. Silence and denial prevail because the president refuses to
speak out.
It is hard to believe that we live in a country where 40 per cent of
those aged between 15 and 49 died of Aids-related illnesses in 2000,
according to the Medical Research Council. Hard, because there is still
a disturbingly high level of denial from communities and from
government about exactly how badly we are affected by HIV/Aids and
there is no coherent operational plan to address the virus. There is
also a general lack of consensus about exactly what we need to do to
prevent new infections and how to treat those who are already infected
- conservatively estimated to be around five million people.
In the face of wars and natural disasters, communities usually stand
together and try to make a plan. But in South Africa large portions of
civil society and government have been at loggerheads over government's
approach to the HIV/Aids virtually since the new government took charge
in 1994. The conflict has worsened, however, since Thabo Mbeki became
president in 1999 and opened the door to dissidents who do not believe
that HIV causes Aids.
A year ago, on 17 April 2002, cabinet finally realised that it was
losing popular support because of its stance on HIV/Aids. Thus, Cabinet
issued a "statement of hope" in which it conceded that anti-retroviral
(ARV) drugs could slow the progression of Aids and said that it would
offer rape survivors free ARVs as post-exposure prophylaxis.
It seemed that South Africa had finally turned a corner, and
stakeholders could now concentrate on fighting HIV/Aids instead of
fighting one another. But in recent months tension has once again
mounted between government and sections of civil society over
government's apparent reluctance to properly explore the provision of
ARVs in the public sector.
In addition, government's continued association with Aids "dissidents"
who dispute that HIV causes Aids once again raised temperatures,
particularly since health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang invited
dissident Dr Roberto Giraldo to advise her on nutritional matters
following an earlier invitation to him to address a Southern African
Development Community nutrition conference.
The biggest expression of public disappointment in government's
approach to HIV/Aids took place on 14 February 2003 when the Treatment
Action Campaign (TAC) organised a march on parliament to coincide with
its opening. The march was supported by over 10 000 people.
Despite the massive protest outside parliament's door, president Thabo
Mbeki made only the briefest of references to how government was
committed to addressing HIV/Aids in his state-of-the-nation address to
parliament. TAC activists had remained hopeful up to the last moment
that Mbeki might make an important announcement on HIV/Aids in his
address. However when he failed to even acknowledge them, an incensed
TAC leadership announced shortly after the march that it would be
embarking on a defiance campaign until government made "an irreversible
and unequivocal commitment to a public sector ARV programme".
According to the TAC, South Africa is now "out of sync with most SADC
countries who have commenced treatment programmes". Botswana offers
free ARVs through public health, while Namibia and Mozambique have
recently announced plans to treat 200 000 and 100 000 people
respectively, with ARVs over the next few years. Another of the TAC's
civil disobedience demands is that government "returns to the
negotiations at Nedlac and makes a commitment to signing a Framework
Agreement with business, labour and community on a National HIV/Aids
Prevention and Treatment Plan".
For months last year, government, business and civil society had been
negotiating over the plan at the National Economic, Development and
Labour Council (Nedlac). The TAC thought the negotiations had
progressed "very well" and "consensus was reached within the HIV/Aids
task team on most areas of the Framework Agree- ment, including the
principles and challenges of ARV access".
However, when the TAC met deputy president Jacob Zuma last October, he
indicated that government might need until February to finalise the
agreement. The TAC agreed to wait until then. But, although business
has since agreed to proposals made, government has yet to return to
Nedlac with its mandate.
The TAC believes that the talks were "derailed by political
opposition" caused when health officials Dr Ayanda Ntsaluba and Dr Nono
Simelela reported back to Tshabalala-Msimang. "From the optimism of the
negotiations we now feel that we are back in a dark and difficult
situation - once again characterised by political denial about HIV,"
the TAC said. "President Mbeki's refusal to recognise the gravity of
the HIV epidemic in his state of the nation address seems to be proof
of that."
Government responded by denying that any agreement had ever been
reached and stated that it would only be able to decide on whether ARVs
could be used in the public sector once a joint Treasury-Health
Department task force costing the matter had reported back.
However the TAC has condemned that approach, saying: "We cannot be
reassured by the existence of a secretive committee of the Departments
of Health and Finance, whose research cannot be subject to public
scrutiny, but which will form the basis for a cabinet decision of
enormous import. This policy causes many preventable deaths."
While the TAC's defiance campaign has not been particularly well
organised and has largely been confined to young people rather than a
broad cross-section of people, it has once again highlighted
government's inability to inspire confidence in its efforts to fight
HIV/Aids.
Government does have an HIV/Aids strategy, but it is simply a broad
set of guidelines and not an operational plan with targets for every
clinic, school, municipality and province. As a result, the
implementation of the HIV/Aids strategy is very uneven in the country.
Gauteng province has for a number of years run an impressive
multi-sectoral HIV/Aids programme; yet Mpumalanga has virtually no
HIV/Aids programme and consistently fails to spend its budget for the
disease.
Moreover there is no one who holds a high position in government who
is consistently speaking out about HIV/Aids. Deputy president Zuma has
been designated to do so. But he has been devoting most of his energies
to brokering a peace plan for the Congo.
Despite government's inability to fully commit itself, and communicate
even its partial commitment, to fighting HIV/Aids, progress is being
made. Government has increased the budget allocation for HIV/Aids from
R342 million in 2001/2 to R3,6 billion in 2005/6.
It expects to distribute 400 million free condoms before the end of
the current year, using outlets such as shebeens as well as clinics.
According to a government press release in mid-April, 658 government
hospitals and clinics now offer HIV-positive pregnant women and their
newborn babies the ARV, Nevirapine, to prevent mother-to-child HIV
transmission. By the end of December last year, almost 7 000 babies had
been given Nevirapine. As the transmission rate from HIV positive
mothers to their babies is around 30 per cent, that means that the
programme has saved about 2 100 babies from HIV infection.
However, while government is now claiming its mother-to-child
programme as an achievement, it should not be forgotten that government
was forced to extend its offer of Nevirapine to all its health
facilities after the TAC brought court action against the health
minister and her provincial counterparts. Had it failed to roll out the
Nevirapine programme, government would have faced a contempt of court
charge.
The government statement listed another achievement: voluntary HIV
counselling and testing (VCT) was available at 982 sites at the end of
2002. Internationally VCT is considered key in getting people to take
personal responsibility for their HIV status, either by changing their
behaviour to ensure they remain HIV negative or adopting healthy
lifestyles if they test positive.
However, a recent assessment of the government's VCT services by the
Health Systems Trust found that most of the test sites were in health
facilities, thus many of those who went for the test were either sick
or pregnant and had been referred by health workers. In essence that
means very little "voluntary" testing was occurring.
Professor Richard Feachem, who heads the Global Fund to Fight Aids, TB
and Malaria and was recently in South Africa, found that there are many
positive aspects to government's fight against HIV/Aids. "From the mood
in the country, it is not a question of if, but when, the public sector
delivers anti-retroviral drugs," Feachem told journalists in
Durban.
Feachem added that his view was informed by the fact that public
health clinicians were being trained in ARV use, that there had been a
large increase in the HIV/Aids budget, and that there was a joint
treasury-health department task force to consider the cost of ARVs.
Feachem was in the country primarily to sign three grant agreements
worth about R328 million which had been awarded to South African
organisations by the Global Fund 18 months ago, but held up after
government made a fuss over the process that led to the award of one of
the grants to KwaZulu-Natal. The signing never happened, however.
Government stalled because some "technicalities" in the agreement
needed to be cleared up first. Thus Feachem learnt, as most South
Africans have now learnt, that while indications can be positive,
nothing can be assumed when it comes to government's stance on
HIV/Aids. Time and again, last minute excuses can delay or undermine
government programmes on HIV/Aids. As a result, many citizens are
cautious about accepting government statements on HIV/Aids at face
value until the concrete delivery of services happens.
Their scepticism goes to the heart of the problems with government's
approach to HIV/Aids: it's terrible inconsistency, which is exacerbated
by extremely poor communication. Tshabalala-Msimang's staff seems to
have given up dealing with the media and there is a dysfunctional
relationship between the minister and senior health department staff.
The Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) continues to
apply gloss to cabinet's eloquent "statement of hope". But government
officials fail to inspire either hope or confidence, particularly when
Tshabalala-Msimang, finance minister Trevor Manual and president Mbeki
address the question of HIV/Aids.
At the same time, communities still refuse to name HIV/Aids as the
driving force that is wiping out citizens in their prime. Denial about
Aids being the cause of death is the order of the day as families hide
behind the notion of "respect for the dead" to pretend to the
living.
Yet the figures speak for themselves. There was an increase of 70 per
cent in the death rate of female teachers under the age of 39 in
KwaZulu-Natal from 1999 to 2000, according to a study of personnel
salary records by the Health Economics and HIV/Aids Research Division
(HEARD) at the University of Natal. An average of 55 teachers a month
died in KwaZulu-Natal in 2000, and the average age at the time of death
was 36. By 2010, actuaries predict that life expectancy in South Africa
will be around 36.
Thus, failure by the politicians to recognise HIV/Aids as a massive
social threat is matched by communities' denial and silence. Until
communities are prepared to name the threat posed by HIV/Aids and
pressurise their councillors, MPLs and MPs to take up the issue,
politicians will be able to get away with their lacklustre approach to
HIV/Aids.
Their approach has taken root and flourishes because the most powerful
person in the country, president Mbeki, refuses to speak out about how
South African citizens should protect themselves from HIV/Aids and care
for those already infected. Many politically ambitious public
representatives consequently believe that by not taking up HIV/Aids
they are in step with the president. Until they can be jolted into
action by their constituencies, an operational plan on HIV/Aids, which
sees drugs to treat opportunistic infections and anti-retroviral drugs
in every clinic, will not become a reality in South Africa.