[This report is the last in a series of five special features produced by
IRIN's PlusNews to coincide with the UN General Assembly's Special Session
on HIV/AIDS from 25-27 June]
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
JOHANNESBURG, 25 June (IRIN) -
In South Africa, with one of the highest infection rates in the world,
nearly one in four adults carry the virus. At least one million South
African children will be left orphaned by the epidemic by 2004. Before
HIV/AIDS, about 2 percent of South African children were orphaned, but
social workers now put the figure at about 10 percent. "It's a huge
problem for us because people are dying every day," said Zodwa Mqadi,
coordinator of the Agape Support Centre for AIDS Orphans outside Durban
in KwaZulu-Natal.
Where public health services have been overwhelmed by HIV/AIDS, it is
charities like the Agape project that are plugging the gap. The centre
consists of a run-down brick house with a small wooden extension grafted
on the side. Small children play in the dusty yard as elderly women from
the nearby township of Waterfall stir bubbling pots of maize meal in the
tiny kitchen. Despite its inauspicious appearance and meagre resources,
the staff at Agape believe they are pioneers in the field of orphan
care.
"The problem with putting AIDS orphans, or any orphans, in an
institution is that it doesn't provide mental and emotional care and it
makes the kids dependent," Mqadi, who founded the project four years
ago, said. Research has shown that placing children without parents in
traditional orphanages often leads to institutionalisation and an
inability to cope with everyday life. "At Agape we're more of a service
provider," Mqadi explained, "we give orphaned children, food, love, a
place to study and play, while trying to keep them in their homes and
communities."
A return visit to Agape later in the day illustrated how the centre
works. Maria is nine. Along with her brother Tony, two years younger,
she sits doing her homework fiddling with her neat hair as she
contemplates a maths problem. The two have been atttending Agape since
their mother died of an AIDS-related illness 18 months ago. After a cup
of tea the two pack up their school bags, and along with a dozen other
children, walk to their nearby homes. "It's tough and we're very sad, my
dad left after mummy became ill, but this place helps us to survive,"
Maria said. Neighbours keep an eye on Maria and Tony, and help out with
food and some shopping. But its the Agape project that allows them to
continue living at home and attending school.
"What's happening at Agape is marvellous, it is a model for this
province because it works," Nozuko Majola, orphans project head at the
AIDS Foundation in Durban, told IRIN. Majola added that the project had
succeeded because it grew out of the community and was an expression of
a strong desire by local people to try and offer something positive to
AIDS orphans in the area. Often orphaned children in Waterfall are
looked after by grandparents or family friends, and Agape supports these
carers as far as possible. "We're talking about 12-year-olds who are
heads of household, our goal is to help that child and the other
siblings have normal lives. That means doing our utmost to keep them
where they are known, where they are happy and where they have the best
chance of developing," Joanne, an Agape worker, told IRIN.
"People want to help, but remember we're talking here about very poor
areas with high unemployment and few facilities," Majola said. Although
initiatives like Agape are providing a positive model for working with
urban AIDS orphans, the sheer number of parentless children due to
HIV/AIDS means massive resources are needed to cope with the problem.
Joanne said they currently work with 43 children at Agape, but they're
only just scratching the surface.
Michela Marques de Souza, UNICEF Project Officer for HIV/AIDS believes
that community capacity to deal with AIDS orphans has to be dramatically
increased: "These children have the right to basic services such as
health and education, as well as love and positive socialisation, the
community can be best placed to deliver these essentials" she said.
But she stressed that much work needs to be done in strengthening poor
communities to enable them to cope.
Just outside Durban lies the industrial suburb of Pinetown, ringed by
informal settlements, the area has a high rate of HIV/AIDS infections,
and the number of orphans is rapidly growing. Tumi lives in a two-roomed
shack made of corrugated iron in Dabeka, one of the informal settlements.
She has been encouraged and supported by Pinetown Child Welfare (PCW) to
foster a child. She doesn't have a job, but she says she's proud to be
playing an active role in confronting AIDS: "I've fostered my sister's two
little ones, it's tough but the social workers help, and I get a little
money," she commented.
PCW are working intensely in poor parts of the district trying to find
surrogate parents for hundreds of AIDS orphans. "We start by identifying
the children while the parents are still alive, this makes the process
easier," Yasmin Rajah, co-ordinator of the orphans programme at PCW told
IRIN. She added that the project works with between 300 and 400 orphaned
children a year, 80-90 percent of whom have no parents due to HIV/AIDS.
Placing these children in foster care is fraught with difficulties and
PCW works to support foster parents and identify and train potential
carers.
"With particular children who are orphaned we look within the family and
try and identify someone to foster, then a lot of work is needed in
explaining what it's all about, because to many people fostering is still a
foreign concept," Rajah said. After screening by social workers (genuine
carers have to be separated from those in it for the money), the carers are
trained and offered counselling around bonding with a child with a terminal
illness. Before, orphans would be automatically absorbed into an extended
family, but this network is rapidly being eroded by AIDS.
"Finding appropriate carers in the community unrelated to the orphaned
child is proving very difficult," Rajah said. That's where the PCW
support group comes, providing information, resources and support to
potential foster carers. "There's still a stigma and a lot of ignorance
around fostering an AIDS orphan, and we're battling to eradicate this,"
Nozuko Majola of Durban AIDS Foundation told IRIN. Placing older
children orphaned by AIDS remains a big problem for PCW, Rajah says, and
babies are fairly easy to find homes for, but getting fostering for
older brothers and sisters is often impossible.
"That's sometimes when we have to separate the kids and its very traumatic,"
Rajah added. The institutionalisation of orphaned children remains a last
resort for PCW social workers: "Nothing replaces the family, kids from
children's homes generally have so many more problems in later life, so our
whole orientation is about keeping these orphans in a family type structure
within a community they know or relate to," Rajah said.
In Guguletu, a desperately poor township on the Cape Flats, unofficial
figures suggest 20 percent of pregnant women are HIV positive. Alan
Jackson, CEO of Cape Town Child Welfare, told IRIN that greater Cape
Town is facing a major crisis due to the AIDS pandemic; "The growing
incidence of child-headed households, child abuse and neglect, street
children and crime point to the enormity of the AIDS orphan problem," he
said. Jackson believes that, given the scale of the problem,
traditional first world models of care such as adoption, institutional
and foster care are no longer sufficient.
Along with income generating schemes, his organisation launched a
successful project to reduce frightening levels of child abuse in
Guguletu. Known as Isolabantwana ("Eye on the Children"), the scheme
centres around training and supporting local people to identify and stop
child abuse. "Isolabantwana empowered the community to deal with child
abuse by giving local people legal powers as well as support, we want to
extend this successful model to try and cope with the growing AIDS
orphan problem," Jackson said. Plans include working through existing
community structures to care for orphans on a street-by-street basis.
"Having the anti-child abuse system in place in a community is a great
asset, orphans are less vulnerable and more informal care structures can
work," he added.
[ENDS]
[This item is produced by the UN's IRIN PlusNews service, on behalf of
the Southern African Regional HIV/AIDS Information Network (RHAIN)]
IRIN-AIDS - Tel: +2711 880 4633
Fax: +2711 447 5472
e-mail: aids@irin.org.za
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