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HIV/AIDS – It rears its ugly face every day
by Dr Ilham Abdelhai,MD
05 March 2004 Maniema Province, DR Congo: Christine* is a 14-year old Congolese girl from Kindu, Maniema Province. When I met her, she was hospitalized for brutal injuries inflicted by a knife on her buttocks and thighs, after being raped by 5 militiamen, thought to belong to one of the Mai Mai factions, active in the area. She has miraculously survived her injuries which started to heal, however, she was still unable to sit or walk without pain.The story of Christine is a story lived by many women and girls in Congo, a post-conflict country where fighting between militias and factions has largely ceased but civilians became the consistent target for killing, rape, looting and an array of harassments. In my work to disseminate information on HIV/AIDS, I have realized how HIV/AIDS intimately mingles with gender issues. I have observed how the low status of women, socially and economically, makes them have less control over their bodies, particularly over their sexuality. This fact, whether manifested as coercive prostitution or the inability to convince a male sexual partner to wear a condom, have a far-reaching impact on HIV/AIDS epidemic making women particularly vulnerable to contract the disease. In Kananga, a city of about 1 million people, the only reliable antenatal care can be found in a private hospital 30 Km outside the town, where cost of treatment is well beyond the means of the majority of Congolese women in the town, and the same could be said about pediatric care. It should be noted that the DRC has one of the highest infant and maternal mortality rates worldwide, estimated as 129 per 1000 live births and 1300 per 100,000 live births, respectively. The social tolerance to rape mentioned above could give an idea of how much is to be done. Working with and through the Congolese society, we can negotiate for more education and rights for women, improve access to health services, so that women could have the control over their sexuality and reproductive life. |
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