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Rights
For Women Can Stem The Spread Of HIV/AIDS
By
Marwaan Macan-Markar
MEXICO
CITY- When it was first reported in June,1981, the unknown disease
that later came to be called AIDS only infected gay men. Then,it
was either called a "gay cancer" or gay-related immune
deficiency.
But
in June 2001, as the world marks 20 years since the first reports
of AIDS, it is clear that the image of AIDS globally has changed.
The death toll and the HIV infection rates are equally common among
males and females, homosexuals and heterosexuals, and children and
babies.
According
to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), some
22 million people have died from the disease, and more than 36 million
people are currently living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
The
global figures, adds UNAIDS, also expose the impact of the pandemic
on women. Of the people who died last year due to AIDS, close to
52 percent, or 1.3 million, were women, thus increasing the total
of women who have died of HIV/AIDS-related illnesses to over nine
million since the epidemic began.
Women
also account for close to 47 percent, or nearly 17 million of the
36 million infected persons. And in sub-Saharan Africa, the region
hardest hit by the disease, being home to some 24.5 million adults
and children living with HIV, an estimated 55 percent of all HIV
positive adults are women, while teenage girls are infected at a
rate of five to six times higher then their male peers, says UNAIDS.
For
women's rights activists, the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS among women
and girls reveals shortcomings in the way governments have tried
to stem the spread of this pandemic. Among such shortcomings, they
point out, is the greater emphasis on perceiving the disease as
simply a health issue, consequently ignoring the reasons for its
spread - which is "a gender issue." "Gender-related
discrimination and a denial of women's economic, social and cultural
rights contribute to women's vulnerability to HIV infections,"
says Geeta Rao Gupta, president of the International Centre for
Research on Women (ICRW), a Washington-based non-profit organisation.
"Women
are denied their right to free and accurate information about their
bodies, and this greatly contributes to their inability to protect
themselves from infection." According to Lydia Cacho, a feminist
and journalist in Mexico, governments need to wake up to this reality
- that denying women their rights, including their sexual and reproductive
rights, will only perpetuate the spread of HIV.
"What
is required," Cacho adds, "is a change from the current
practice of trying to halt the spread of HIV through only health
policies. Women in Latin America have become infected as a result
of some of their basic rights being denied, and this needs to be
recognised by government policy makers." Similar thinking is
echoed by the UN Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM), which is working towards a gender-sensitive
programme of action to emerge from the June 25-27 UN General Assembly's
Special Session on HIV/AIDS.
In
May, after UNIFEM signed
an agreement with UNAIDS to strengthen the UN global response to
HIV/AIDS, Noeleen Heyzer, UNIFEM's executive director, remarked
that gender inequality was "at the heart of the epidemic, which
today is our biggest threat to development." Furthermore, she
said, "We must address power imbalances in every single policy,
strategy and programme related to prevention, treatment and care,
if we seriously want to tackle this global challenge. It is not
simply a matter of justice and fairness. In this case, gender inequality
is fatal." According to the World Health Organisation (WHO),
women have become more vulnerable than men due to a range of factors,
including social, cultural and biological.
In
a document, "Human Rights, Women and HIV/AIDS," the Geneva-based
health agency points out that a woman's right to safe sex and to
autonomy in all decisions relating to sexuality is "respected
almost nowhere." WHO says this disregard not only affects female
sex workers, but women generally. "Women are not expected to
discuss or make decisions about sexuality and they cannot request,
let alone insist on using a condom or any form of protection,"
says WHO.
If
women refuse sex or insist on condom use, they often run the risk
of abuse, since it gives rise to suspicions of infidelity. "The
many forms of violence against women mean that sex is often coerced,
which is itself a risk factor for HIV infection." Other social
and cultural realities make women more vulnerable. "Men, on
average, have more sexual partners than women, and that means men
with HIV have more opportunity to transmit the virus to others -
and these others are women," says Martin Foreman, of the Panos
Institute, a London-based non-profit organisation.
In
addition, he adds, poverty has encouraged women in Africa to use
sex as "a form or currency, either to be exchanged for money,
or more often, for gifts or security." Psychologically, too,
women are more vulnerable, particularly young women, he adds. This
is demonstrated by the trend among older men to seek younger women
for sex in "exchange for gifts." And often, "those
older men are more likely than younger men to be HIV-positive."
According to Dominique De Santis, a spokeswoman for UNAIDS, women
are often younger when they have their first sexual encounter than
men. And the likelihood of these young women getting infected is
greater ,because "HIV passes more easily from men to women
through sex than from women to men." And once infected, says
WHO, women endure other forms of discrimination.
"Women's
access to care and support for HIV/AIDS is much delayed - if it
arrives at all - and limited. Family resources are nearly always
devoted to caring for the man. Women, even when infected themselves,
are providing all the care." Compounding that reality is the
stigma that women endure. Such discrimination is "much stronger
against women," says WHO. And in many instances, women with
AIDS have experienced "violence, neglect of health and material
needs, destitution and ostracism from family and community."
In a sad twist of irony, WHO studies also have revealed that women
"are often blamed for spreading the disease, always seen as
the 'vector' even though the majority have been infected by (their)
partner or husband." According to De Santis, girls and women
need to be protected if the spread of AIDS is to be stalled. UNAIDS
encourages the widespread use of male condoms, female condoms and
microbicides.
For
Gupta, of ICRW, health programmes need to be designed that educate
and provide women with the information they need about their bodies
and sex. In addition, "women's social and economic vulnerability,
and the imbalance in power between women and men that constitute
gender inequality, must be addressed in order to guarantee women
health and protection from HIV."
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