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Aids orphans abandoned on Lesotho's
streets to die alone
In Nazareth Haphloane, straddling a picturesque valley
in the kingdom of Lesotho, women till the rocky fields, men look after
livestock and children attend school. It seems a tranquil neighbourhood,
at peace with itself. But most mornings, the village wakesto a grim
reality: the death of another of its own. The tiny mounds of fresh
gravel in the graveyard tell a chilling story.
"At this rate of dying, this village will soon be
wiped out," Liphapang Phafoli, a village elder, says. "We are burying a
child or adult victim of Aids almost every day."
In Nazareth Haphloane and other districts of Lesotho,
perhaps an even worse reality has emerged: very young Aids orphans are
being abandoned on the streets. Relatives are either incapable of
looking after them or do not want to be "overburdened by someone's
HIV-positive child who is going to die anyway", says Mphonyane Mofokeng,
of Save the Children Lesotho.
Mr Phafoli, 70, is among the village elders who have
now formed a community group to tackle Aids in a country where 30 per
cent of the 1.8 million inhabitants are infected. Lesotho is the third
hardest-hit country in the world. To head off the unfolding catastrophe,
Mr Phafoli proposes drastic and immediate action. Everybody in the
village must be tested for Aids. If they refuse, the government must
compel them. If everyone gets to know the truth about themselves and
others, more deaths will be avoided.
It is easy to see why Mr Phafoli and fellow
support-group members have had to contemplate such desperate measures.
Households headed by children are common in the village of 3,000 people.
Ntetekeng Makotoko was not yet 18 when her parents
died of Aids. She had long before dropped out of school to look after
them, and became the head of a household of seven. Her youngest sibling
is four. "We survive by the grace of God," she says.
Grandmothers such as Lorentina Mathosi, 75, can
inherit three Aids orphans, and have nothing to support them with.
Despite her age, she tills other people's fields in exchange for food.
"Aids orphans have become a magnet for abuse," says
Mrs Mofokeng, whose centre helps dozens of abandoned children. "Everyone
wants to take advantage of them to use them as sex slaves or for child
labour." Two-year-old Lehlohonolo Malefane is lucky to be alive.
After his parents died of Aids, he was taken in by an uncle who abused
and nearly killed him. He was rescued by neighbours and police and is in
the care of Save the Children Lesotho, which has put him in hospital.
"The uncle wanted to kill him, perhaps due to
frustration," Mrs Mofokeng says. "He seemed not to want to be burdened
by a boy who was HIV-positive and whose parents had died of Aids. Such
attitudes are common here."
The government realises that Aids orphans are being
abused. Relatives often accept orphans to plunder their parents'
property, then abandon them on the streets. Limakatso Chisepo, the
government's director of social welfare in the Ministry of Health and
Child Welfare, says: "Even some young mothers abandon their HIV-positive
infants in hospitals soon after giving birth." She says growing
numbers of relatives are not willing to carry the burden of the
estimated 100,000-plus Aids orphans in Lesotho.
At the overcrowded Insured Salvation orphanage run by
the Rev Mavis Mochokocho in the Lesotho capital, Maseru, eight
HIV-positive orphans have just been left by relatives. The week before,
10 boys, who had been sexually abused after being thrown on the streets
by relatives, were taken to the orphanage. "Police bring the
children here every day," Ms Mochokocho says. "They pick them up in the
streets or in public places. We can't refuse to accept them even though
we are overstretched." Several children are severely ill and many
infected ones die soon after arrival. The orphanage struggles to acquire
coffins, so orphans are taught how to make makeshift ones so they can
bury each other.
With only 200 children and 6,000 adults on
anti-retroviral drugs out of more than 56,000 people in need, the
outlook for Lesotho is bleak. Life expectancy is now 35 years although
in 1991 it was 60, Unicef says.
Ms Mochokocho says impoverishment is the main cause of
the widespread abandonment of Aids orphans in a kingdom with 50 per cent
unemployment and almost no substantial resources apart from a crumbling
textiles industry and water exports to South Africa. Only 10 per cent of
the land is arable. Food shortages caused by persistent drought have
worsened the problem.
The government is trying to raise awareness.
Billboards read "Jesus Forgives, Aids Doesn't", "Avoid Sex, Your Youth
is like a Flower". But in a country with a high rate of illiteracy, the
message is not sinking in.
Basildon Peta
14 January 2006
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article338444.ece
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