
Dressed in jeans and a pink T-shirt, 12-year-old
Sheila Daniel stood up confidently in front of a packed conference of
about 200 people. “We want to go to school, to have school material, to
have health care, to play, to be loved,” she said. “One day we want to
be doctors, engineers, so we can look after our families and other
orphans.”
Mozambique: Aids orphans come under
the spotlight
Sheila was addressing Mozambique's first national
seminar on children orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS, held from
24 to 28 November in the capital, Maputo. “I want to help my mother,”
she told IRIN. Her confident voice wavered slightly as she explained
that her father had succumbed to an AIDS-related disease. “He died on 3
February 2002,” she said. Sheila now lives with her mother and her
brother, eight-year-old Danubio.
Sheila had been chosen by Rede Da Crianca, a network
of local NGOs working with children, to lead a one-day meeting of 40
children just before the national seminar. All the children had either
been orphaned by HIV/AIDS or directly touched by the epidemic that is
affecting 13 per cent of Mozambique's adult population. “I was a little
bit frightened leading the meeting. It was the first time I had the
chance to meet other orphans, like me. We discussed our problems, and
what help we need to solve them — we all have similar problems. I hope
that the people talking at this seminar will help us,” she told IRIN.
Participants at the seminar, organised by the Ministry
for Women and the Co-ordination of Social Action (MMCAS), and supported
by a range of international organisations and NGOs, acknowledged that a
mammoth task lay ahead of them.
Graca Machel, president of the Foundation for
Community Development (FDC), said a major project would be obtaining
more accurate data about the country's orphans, including exact numbers,
where they were living, their ages, gender and needs. Besides providing
basic social services and making sure they could access these easily,
orphans also required emotional and moral support, protection and love.
Official figures indicate that Mozambique has over
500,000 maternal AIDS orphans. An estimated 500 new HIV infections occur
every day, with 94,602 AIDS-related deaths so far this year. At the
moment there appears to be no end in sight to the worsening crisis. In
the central region of the country 26.5 percent of Mozambicans between 15
and 49 years are infected with the virus.
As in most other sub-Saharan countries hit by the
epidemic, it was the extended family who often cared for orphaned
children, but many of these families were already living in grinding
poverty and are struggling to feed themselves in the current food
shortages throughout the southern African region.
“The orphan crisis needs an urgent response. It must
become a top priority for all actors within government, non-governmental
organisations and civil society, and this must also be reflected in the
allocation of adequate financial and human resources,” said Marie-Pierre
Poirier of the UN Children Fund (UNICEF).
She pointed out that to date the UN had received less
than five percent of the funds needed for those living with HIV/AIDS in
drought-affected areas. “The latest data highlights that we need to do
more to ensure that orphaned children are identified and are receiving
appropriate support. The limited response to the UN regional appeal is
having an extremely negative impact on our ability to respond to the
situation.”
There was general agreement that a more coordinated
effort should be made to ensure that orphaned children could access
social services and were protected from child and sexual abuse.
“Communities capacities have also to be strengthened,” said Atieno
Odenyo, a UNICEF protection officer.
UNICEF supports the MMCAS to ensure free health
services for all orphaned children, while cooperating in the development
of a plan for 2003/04 and the ongoing review of child-related
legislation. Machel stressed that it was critical to give orphaned
children inheritance rights.
Sheila told participants that education was very
important. Although she had not missed any years of schooling and was
now in the seventh grade, her mother found it difficult to provide all
the school materials she needed.
Odenyo agreed, saying that while providing for
immediate needs was a priority, “education is especially critical as it
is a long-term solution to the problem and expands the children's
choices in the future.”
The Ministry of Education is developing a policy to
exempt orphaned children from paying registration fees. Although
minimal, any amount was too costly for most poor families trying to look
after their own children as well as orphaned ones.
Sheila was indignant when talking about stigma. The
government must make sure we orphans are not discriminated against,” she
said. “It happens. I remember when I was talking to my friend, a woman
told me to shut up. She said I was nothing, that I was just an orphan.”
3 December 2003
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