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	<title>Inter Press ServiceHEALTH-SRI LANKA: NGO Takes HIV/AIDS Battle To Soldiers</title>
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		<title>HEALTH-SRI LANKA: NGO Takes HIV/AIDS Battle To Soldiers</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/1999/10/health-sri-lanka-ngo-takes-hiv-aids-battle-to-soldiers/</link>
		<comments>https://www.ipsnews.net/1999/10/health-sri-lanka-ngo-takes-hiv-aids-battle-to-soldiers/#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Oct 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Feizal Samath</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia-Pacific]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Development & Aid]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ipsnews.net/?p=67637</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Feizal Samath]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><p class="wp-caption-text">Feizal Samath</p></font></p><p>By Feizal Samath<br />COLOMBO, Oct 15 1999 (IPS) </p><p>Military personnel and migrant workers have been identified as new high risk groups in Sri Lanka&#8217;s battle against HIV/AIDS as the ethnic conflict drags into the 16th year and large numbers of women migrate abroad.<br />
<span id="more-67637"></span><br />
Manel Silva, senior programme officer at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) office in Colombo, says these two categories were getting special attention in most HIV/AIDS programmes in Sri Lanka.</p>
<p>Non-governmental agencies working in this field said new projects had been started in the army to educate soldiers on AIDS issues, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and avoidance.</p>
<p>There is great interest in the programmes and the army has made a request for more training for their officers, said Swarna Kodagoda, executive director of Alliance Lanka, which started projects at two army camps in the southern region last year</p>
<p>She said most of the soldiers were unaware of STDs but were able, through these awareness programmes, to widen their knowledge of safe sex and others issues connected to AIDS. The two camps are training army units for the battle zones in the north and the east.</p>
<p>Health workers say that though Sri Lanka is a low prevalence country as far as the AIDS epidemic is concerned, the rate of infection could rise due to the protracted civil war and the country&#8217;s close proximity to India, predicted to be the AIDS hotspot of the world in the new millenium.<br />
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&#8220;The continuing ethnic conflict and our proximity to India makes Sri Lanka very vulnerable to the AIDS epidemic,&#8221; says De Silva, who handles the UNDPs HIV/AIDS programme.</p>
<p>According to the state-run National STD/AIDS Control Programme, the number of deaths from AIDS up to the end of August this year was 73 while HIV positive cases totaled 286 and AIDS carriers were 100.</p>
<p>De Silva said according to UN estimates there are between 7,000 and 8,000 people living with the HIV/AIDS virus but the figure could be much higher. It is difficult to obtain figures and proper statistics because it relates to sexual behaviour, she told IPS.</p>
<p>But she agreed there was a much better awareness of the virus now against 1986 when Sri Lanka&#8217;s first AIDS case was reported in a foreign visitor, and since then a string of HIV/AIDS programmes undertaken under the aegis of the UN and other NGOs have shown positive results.</p>
<p>Military personnel are a high-risk group as they mingle with local populations and have, often temporary, liaisons with local girls, AIDS workers said.</p>
<p>In the northcentral town of Anuradhapura where soldiers gather at a transit base, there has been a proliferation of brothels in recent times. Police have occasionally raided the brothels, which are temporary and housed in small hotels or restaurants.</p>
<p>Anuradhapura, lying midway to the northern and eastern regions where government troops are battling Tamil separatist guerillas since 1983, has a large military base and airfield.</p>
<p>Migrant workers who are at risk are mostly females who travel to the Middle East as domestic help, said De Silva adding that Sri Lanka was the only Asian country where the number of female migrants far exceeded male labour outflows.</p>
<p>A UNDP note says that each year about 160,000 people go abroad on employment of which 70 to 80 percent are women mostly in the 18 to 40 years age group. In their place of work, they have low social status and are extremely vulnerable, experiencing many forms of exploitation, including sexual abuse, it said.</p>
<p>It said that according to available statistics, 50 percent of reported HIV cases are housemaids who have returned from the Middle East.</p>
<p>Alliance Lanka&#8217;s Kodagoda said her Colombo-based NGO, established in 1995, works through a string of village-level and community based groups with the long-term objective of slowing the spread of HIV and reducing the impact of the AIDS epidemic.</p>
<p>Since 1995, Alliance Lanka has provided technical and financial support to 151 projects of 98 local NGOs based in 14 districts in Sri Lanka. &#8220;One of our biggest achievements has been to mobilise the support of NGOs which hitherto worked only in general fields of health and development not in HIV/AIDS work per se,&#8221; Kodagoda said.</p>
<p>She said the work of Alliance Lanka, connected to the</p>
<p>London-based International HIV/AIDS Alliance, went beyond mere awareness programmes on safe sex and STDs.</p>
<p>Our programmes also deal with how to respond to behavioral changes for specific targets that are vulnerable, she said.</p>
<p>An Alliance project in the northcentral town of Dambulla is aimed at truck drivers, commercial sex workers and three-wheel taxi drivers. Dambulla is a large rice and vegetable-growing centre where many outsiders congregate for business purposes.</p>
<p>Kodagoda said they were targeting a small group of 30 people. It is a sensitive project as we have to talk to truck drivers, three-wheel taxi drivers and sex workers on issues like safe sex.</p>
<p>There has to a strong element of confidentiality and trust in tackling these people otherwise they wont respond, she said.</p>
<p>UNDP&#8217;s De Silva says the agency&#8217;s HIV/AIDS two-year programme worth 300,000 dollars was launched last year and is intended to supplement the main ongoing national programme that is funded by UNAIDS.</p>
<p>She said the project was aimed at sensitising the people on HIV/AIDS. AIDS is not only a health issue but a socio economic problem that affects the whole family. It can drain the health of the nation by affecting productivity, De Silva said.</p>
<p>The UNDP programme targets high risk groups like the military, migrant workers both internal and external &#8212; taxi and truck drivers, commercial sex workers, school leavers and members of the tourist trade.</p>
<p>&#8220;We are conducting programmes to strengthen existing STD/AIDS projects and in capacity building while asking provincial councils to set up their own awareness programmes targeting vulnerable groups in their regions,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>At a national level, UNDP is supporting ministries to educate employees particulaly on issues like how HIV/AIDS is transmitted. &#8220;You may be surprised but there are still people who are unaware as to how one gets infected with HIV/AIDS,&#8221; De Silva said.</p>
<p>Alliance Lanka&#8217;s Kodagoda said that in the past 18 months her organisation and its partners had made considerable progress in enhancing the quality of prevention efforts.</p>
<p>Simple awareness raising activities were now being supplemented with behaviour change communication, promotion and referrals to STD diagnosis and treatment facilities and organisation of vulnerable communities, she said.</p>
		<p>Excerpt: </p>Feizal Samath]]></content:encoded>
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