Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

India's hidden AIDS epidemic

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

India's hidden Aids epidemic: virus to infect 25m by 2010

Campaigners say a combination of ignorance and huge inequalities

between the sexes is allowing HIV to spread quickly

By Maxine Frith in Madras

19 November 2003. When she was 21, Kousalya Periasamy was forced into

marriage with a man she did not like.

She was told she had to marry him because his family owned land that

supplied water to her father's factory. What Kousalya wasn't told was

that her husband was HIV positive.

" He knew he was positive and his family knew too. I think my father

suspected because he knew what my husband was like, but the marriage

was all to do with money, " Kousalya said.

" I knew nothing. I didn't like my husband but he forced me to have

sex with him and his family said it was my duty. I became ill and my

husband's family said I should go for tests, and that is when I found

out I was HIV positive. " Kousalya's story is tragically common in

India, and goes to the heart of its burgeoning Aids epidemic.

While the country is becoming increasingly wealthy from foreign

investment, and the growth of call centres and its hi-tech industry,

the status of women has remained hugely unequal. Women have few

rights to property, or control over whom they marry. Rape within

marriage is legal, and domestic violence is condoned rather than

condemned.

Low-caste women are often forced into prostitution, and even those

who are better off can find it difficult to receive health care

because they are put under pressure not to leave the house alone.

Campaigners say the inequalities are adding to the rapid spread of

HIV and Aids. A report by the British charity Voluntary Service

Overseas, to be published this week, will warn that unless women's

rights are improved India could face disaster.

The Indian government insists that only 4 million people have HIV or

Aids - about 0.4 per cent of the population. But most aid agencies

say the real figure is much higher. The Centre for Strategic and

International Studies in Washington has estimated India will have 25

million cases by 2010.

While the West has focused on Africa when dealing with the Aids

epidemic, India has been largely ignored. But as hospitals struggle

to cope with the numbers of sick patients, and the country opens its

first Aids orphanages, the Indian government is under increasing

pressure to act.

Piot, the head of the UN Aids agency, recently told a

conference in Delhi: " India has a king-sized problem. But it is a

problem with a solution. We can act now before it is too late. "

According to the VSO report, Gendering Aids, women's low status and

lack of rights have left them vulnerable to infection regardless of

their own behaviour. Married men visit prostitutes, putting their

wives at risk of infection. Three quarters of HIV-positive women have

been infected within marriage. Even if a woman knows her husband is

infected, it can be impossible to insist he practises safe sex. If

they leave their husbands, women, in effect, forfeit their rights to

the marital home and the dowry they brought with them. As increasing

numbers of HIV-positive men are dying in India, young widows are

finding themselves forced out of their home by their husband's

relatives.

While the government has begun to respond to the Aids epidemic, it

has done little to improve women's rights. It has also banned

discussion of condoms in schools and colleges, despite the fact that

many girls are married by the time they are 16. Girls are

traditionally not supposed to know anything of sex or contraception

before they marry.

Satish Kumar, an education officer who works with the Aids group YRG

Care in the southern city of Chennai, said: " We need to be able to

give teenagers information about condoms. The government says that it

will encourage them to become promiscuous, but that is not true. "

African countries such as Uganda have cut HIV rates with a campaign

known as ABC: Abstain, be faithful or use condoms. VSO has started

recruiting volunteers from Uganda to work on HIV and Aids projects in

India. In Africa, drug companies have agreed to supply cheap anti-HIV

drugs, but the deal does not extend to India.

K K Abraham, of the Indian Network of Positive People, said: " India

has got to go through a phenomenal social and economic change in the

way we think before we can deal with the Aids issue and see women as

equals. "

Attitudes are beginning to change. Kousalya was so outraged at the

way she was treated that she set up her own support group, the

Positive Women's Network, and became the first woman in India to go

public about having the virus.

Three years ago, she was critically ill with HIV-related infections.

Thanks to anti-Aids drugs, she is now healthy and will travel to

London for the launch of the VSO report. " When I first got ill, I was

very angry at my husband. I thought I was going to die because Aids

meant death, and life had no meaning, " she said. " Now I can look

forward to the future. I like to look after my nieces. I want India

to change for them. "

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?

story=465047

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...