HIV/ AIDS Prevalence; Moral Decay Takes Its Toll on Uganda
By Valerian Kkonde
PEARL NEWS SERVICE
The country
once applauded as a role model in combating the HIV/AIDS epidemic, is now
sending shivers down the spines, not only of Ugandans but the world over, as it
dangerously backslides on the glorious achievements. Repercussions of this are
not merely dire but they talk of a fundamental problem whose actual cost to the
country is continued loss of productive lives, further stunting all attempts at
development.
Uganda’s
2011 HIV Indicator Survey indicated that the proportion of Ugandans aged
between 15 and 49 infected with HIV has risen and now stands at 7.3%. Among
women, the proportion is higher at 8.3%. In the 2004/5 Survey the infection
rate stood at 6.4%.
Worse still,
the Survey reveals, the number of new infections has been rising steadily: from
124,000 in 2009 through 128,000 in 2010, and now to approximately 145,000 in
2011. It goes ahead to declare that by all indications, higher new infections
are to be registered in the years to come.
“This rising
number of new infections exceeds the annual number of patients enrolled into
anti-retroviral treatment by two-fold. If this status quo continues the HIV
burden in our country is projected to increase by more than 700,000 new
infections over the next five years, including an estimated 25,000 unfortunate
babies born with the infection each year through no fault of their own,”
observes Dr. Vinand Nantulya the Chairman, Uganda Aids Commission.
Uganda Aids
Commission (UAC) was established by the Parliamentary Statute No. 2 of 1992 and
mandated to oversee, plan and coordinate AIDS prevention and control activities
throughout Uganda. It is under the president’s office. The Commission maintains
that loss of focus on sex behavior as the center piece for turning off the flow
of new infections as well as the introduction of anti-retroviral treatment and
other bio-medical interventions are some of the factors responsible for this
prevalence rise. Condom use has been identified as the source of false safety
and multiple concurrent partners.
The other is
behavioral change. UAC says that the solidarity, compassion, commitment and
collective focus on behavioral change by a people under siege as exhibited
during the late 80s and early 90s have been lost. Parents too have been faulted
for abdicating their responsibility of nurturing their children and being their
role models.
UAC further
identifies the churning out of confusing communications as the third of the
factors leading to this escalation in infections. UAC says that those
responsible for engaging people with constructive messages have either relaxed
or completely abandoned the struggle.
Many people
are taking advantage of the epidemic, as a cure continues to elude the dot com
era, to make hay while it shines. As some fraudsters continue to claim to have
cures to this ogre, others sale dubious drugs to unsuspecting victims as well
as those affected by HIV. Even funds for the victims have been robbed; in other
instances the drugs have been used as a political tool whereby one’s political
leaning determines whether to receive treatment or not.
About the
2011 National HIV Indicator Survey UAC says that it is up to every single Ugandan
to eliminate new infections, stigma and discrimination, end AIDS-related
deaths, youths choose to protect themselves, adults knowing their status and
leaders getting involved, the battle will be won.
Most
striking is UAC’s call to government and parliament to ensure that
interventions by all sectors are well resourced for effective implementation of
this campaign. It is one thing UAC to be under the president’s office but
another for government to have the resolve to meaningfully steer the campaign forward,
anymore.
Uganda’s
contribution to the fight against HIV/AIDS is well documented the world over.
That was during the late 80s and mid 90s. This success story received praises
from as high as the then American president Bill Clinton and the American
administration as a whole. It was summed up as a result of “the head of the new
breed of African leaders” as praises were heaped on Uganda’s own, president
Museveni.
From 1993 to
1998 Uganda was overflowing with the Global Funds money meant for scaling up
the fight against HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis. The purpose being that
the achievements gained, during a period when silence and finger-pointing
characterized this stage of the epidemic, be protected and promoted if other
countries were to come out openly to successfully tackle the challenge. But what followed this enormous international
good will was more than shame; it was heart rending!
The manner
in which the Global Fund money was wasted and robbed was not only appalling but
it was another of the many disregarded warnings pointing to the fact that the
country was in the hands of gold diggers. This was a distressed call for help which
went unanswered!
It took the
intervention of the Global Fund suspension of five grants to Uganda in August
2005, worth US $ 367, for government to institute a judicial commission of
inquiry into the alleged mismanagement of the funds.
Asked on the
relationship between the HIV/AIDS National Survey’s negative findings and the
findings of the Global Fund Commission which he chaired, retired High Court
judge James Ogoola told PNS that “because the money was not used for what it
was supposed to do, and the little that was done was done inadequately, it must
in some own way have some contribution to the problem that is continuing today.
“The fact
that this misuse of funds was done at very high levels of government, including
ministries, Permanent Secretaries, directors of ministries, and some medical
professionals…that fact plus the fact that it was massive. The doers were not a
few people, not just ten or 100. They were in thousands!
This was a massive exercise. Now because of that and the
massive level, that has also contributed to the negative image in the fight
against HIV/AIDS.”
Justice Ogoola, who today heads the Judicial Service
Commission, is of the view that if Uganda is to reverse the negative figures
and even have an HIV/AIDS- free society, then “we must also intensify the fight
against immorality, the fight for integrity, the fight for self discipline. We
must also intensify the role of our clinics and health services because some of
the AIDS is caught through bad hygiene and inadequate health care.
“Therefore, we must put right the policies that we are
following. We must put right the people who are in charge of these policies so
that a repeat of the Global Funds does not occur.”
After
robbery of the Global Fund billions, came the robbery of the Gavi Funds meant
for immunization.
Anyone who
has nursed, let alone seen an AIDS patient must have witnessed first hand how
helpless one can be. To deny the victims
and those affected by HIV AIDS what is meant for them you have to be evil
incarnate. But that is what the country’s rulers, who keep reminding everyone
that they are freedom fighters, are doing. They are evil incarnate.
It is true
that this very regime played a key role in raising awareness about the
rampaging virus in the late 80s. By critically looking at who they are and what
they have done since they grabbed power in 1986, one can infer that it was not
an act of good will; Museveni and cohorts jumped on the anti AIDS campaign in
order to be accepted on the local and global stage. It is an open secret that
these people had a litany of atrocities, advocated for weird policies and were
against established institutions as well as progressive and independent-minded individuals.
As AIDS
ravaged peasants in the Southern areas of Uganda, the newly rich seized this
opportunity to conceal their true identity. This once prosperous part of the
country was devastated by the 1979 war that ousted Idi Amin and had not
recovered in 1985 when Museveni and his National Resistance Army rebels pitched
there camp for their final push on the capital Kampala. The region was already
in free fall.
One can refer
to the period from 1986 to 1991 as the time when Museveni and his henchmen
showed their best side while concealing their true evil one which is raring its
head for the whole world to see now. By then many people, apart from those who
had prior knowledge of their true identity, considered them the long awaited
saviors of the country. But as time progressed, their true identity reared its
ugly head and everything began to fall apart. That is what the 2011 National
HIV Indicator Survey emphasizes; there is nothing new as such. This can only be
hailed as new by those who want to play the ostrich and hide their heads in the
sand.
The trend
Uganda is taking is that of forcing people to see the reality, shutter masks
and demand for accountability and action. Without discipline, self respect,
high self esteem and a sense of shame it is impossible to care about human
dignity. That is why president Museveni keeps claiming that he alone has a
vision for Uganda as if he founded the country. But the more he imposes himself
on the country, the more insecure he becomes and destruction sets in.
When he had
just captured power in 1986, Museveni bought his bed from the local carpenters.
He ordered for Toyota Laurels which had low fuel consumption. It is the same
Museveni who in early 2007 had two private jets. He has to fly his daughter to
Germany in a private jet to give birth. He also travels in a convoy of twenty
fuel-guzzling vehicles. But Uganda has the worst health facilities in the East
African region.
The period
under review has a number of prominent incidents but all of them point to the
evil bit of the powers that be. The robberies of public funds and resources, incessant
riots against the different forms of oppression, the rising cost of living due
to the criminals controlling the economy and the state-inspired murders are
some of the ills that stand out.
UAC’s
reasons for the resurgence of HIV/AIDS are half truths at best; the real cause
of this is the systematic moral decay afflicting Uganda. Whoever cares is aware
of the robberies going on in the country but orchestrated by the rulers. Even
the money meant for the rehabilitation of the Northern region which this same
government subjected to dehumanizing conditions for two decades has not been
spared! That public funds cannot be protected by the Prime Minister, the person
entrusted with overseeing government business, ably sums up where the country
is headed to.
That all
this is happening in the Office of the Prime Minister simply confirms that the
rot, primitive accumulation of wealth and the moral decay in the country flow
from the rulers to those they rule. At least 60 billion shillings has been
robbed in this scam where funds for official work were deposited on personal
accounts of some OPM staff accounts.
And even
though some culprits or fronts like the Permanent Secretary Pius Bigirimana and
the accountant Godfrey Kazinda, as well as some Bank of Uganda officials have
been singled out, the rulers have found it appropriate to use the tax-payers’
money to refund the stolen funds as donors cut off the aid taps.
If you still
cannot appreciate the levels of moral decay in Uganda, just look at the VIP
treatment government gives the likes of Basajjabalaba, Kazinda, Bigirimana and
all that pack of politically-connected figures used as conduits to siphon off
public funds, and the savage treatment of MPs, journalists, civil activists and
politicians demanding for accountability and service delivery.
How about
the daylight murders of people with political views different from the powers
that be!
A colleague
at Pearl News Service had an assignment with The Aids Support Organisation
(TASO) which involved a number of activities and moving to different parts of
the country. Because TASO, then, had a policy of employing those who had tested
positive, some people were misled into thinking that whoever was there was
infected.
This
misconception helped the journalist to eavesdrop on the conversations of these
people which mainly focused on what they were going through. Some girls/women
had the guts to inquire from others the numbers of those they had so far infected
with the virus! They would go on to declare that they will not spare one who is
“absent minded” referring to those who do not care to use the condom, because
they too never wanted to contract the virus!
Others
narrated how they were finding it difficult to pass on the virus because they
had “sprayed.” In Luganda it is called okufuuyira.
This simply refers to one who has developed sores on the skin. They went on to
discuss tricks of successfully passing on the virus and these included buying
of condoms, poke holes in the condoms and offer them to sex partners for use.
“When you
buy very many of them and pierce holes in them it is hard for one to be
suspicious. You put about five condom sachets on the table for him to choose,”
the conversations raged on!
Although the
men too supported the poking of holes in the condoms, some advocated for
outright rape if the partner tried to resist sex without a condom. While Police
records indicate a surge in rape cases, it is worth noting that majority rape
cases go without mention as victims decide to suffer in silence.
It is high
time the country stopped being surprised by the findings of the Survey, most
especially the revelation that 400 Ugandans are being infected on a daily
basis.
The Survey
is sending out an appeal that many people prefer to neglect, for selfish
reasons, or just do not bother to give ample attention passing on the
responsibility of rectifying the anomaly to others. The message is that of
regime change as Dr. Kiiza Besigye and other people, including those in the
ruling National Resistance Movement are spearheading. Twenty six years at the
helm of a country is too long for a person to remain focused, committed,
relevant and considerate. Currently Museveni is drunk with power and all he
considers important is how to cling to it.
And it is
not only HIV and AIDS that is escalating; the health sector is at its worst,
freedoms are curtailed at every turn, poverty is forcing parents to sell their
property- including land -to send children to school and people are being
evicted from land and have become refugees in their own country. Public
properties are being personalized at a rate that is threatening the existence
of schools.
HIV/AIDS is
receiving a lot of attention due to the fact that it is mainly spread through
sex and also the trillions of dollars sunk in research so far. Up to now it is
still evading cure. Otherwise everything in Uganda is going terribly wrong. And
it is systematically, deliberately and confidently being designed that way to
ensure maximum destruction.
No person,
stable upstairs, can claim ignorance of the lack of cure for HIV/ AIDS. After
all these years and effort put in to sensitise the public, the rate at which
the virus has returned to devastate the country should only be witnessed at the
finding of a cure; the excitement alone would run many crazy to the extent of
engaging in dangerous sexual behaviours.
Any one
concerned with the HIV/AIDS prevalence should be more concerned with malaria
which is a leading killer disease. It is an open secret that nets meant for
distribution for free to curb malaria are on market for sale. So are the vital
drugs. Those drugs which are not stolen are left to rot in the stores while
malaria ravages the country.
What matters
in Uganda today is the amount of money the rulers, their children and cohorts
can accumulate; not the numbers that succumb to malaria, HIV/AIDS and other
preventable diseases.
The moral
decadence afflicting Uganda is all there is to show for this HIV prevalence.
That is why no amount of funding, information dissemination, blood tests and
all the other prevention strategies will succeed in reversing the devastating
HIV prevalence with a criminal and morally deficient regime in place. If Uganda
indeed is to once again wage a successful campaign against HIV/AIDS then regime
change must be at the fore front.
In fact
regime change must be at the heart of the HIV/AIDS national prevention strategy
to successfully reverse the HIV prevalence. That is the only viable means of
putting the country on a path to moral revival. As for now, the country is
racing to excel in doing evil.
The family,
the nursery for social norms and values, as well as spiritual development has
instead become the first point where children learn of hatred, murder, devil
worshipping and all other evil acts one can think of. And from a morally
bankrupt home, the kid lands in an equally bankrupt society awash with
disastrous exposure to pornography and misleading information by the gutter
press with strong connections to the powers that be.
The carnage
on Uganda’s roads keeps rising every other day although traffic Police presence
is visible on all major roads. Commercial motor cycles referred to as boda
bodas are practically used to murder innocent people but why won’t government
regulate them first before regulating the freedom of assembly and expression!
Zebra crossings are more of decorations on Uganda’s roads which even the Police
cannot respect.
The storm
caused by the suspicious death of the Butalejja Woman MP Celina Nebanda can
only take place in a morally bankrupt country like Uganda. For God’s sake why
should the president be upset because the Speaker of Parliament and some MPs
denounce government’s version of the causes of the MP’s death? Uganda would be
a far better country if president Museveni was equally upset by the moral
decay, the robbery of public funds and resources, disrespect for freedoms and
the institutional breakdown.
Once moral
decadency sets in, people seize to reason and take to using their heads for
wearing hats. It is also the time to hear highly educated people talk like they
have never seen a blackboard! Even elders fail to offer guidance to the young
and instead behave like kids; they go to the extent of stammering as if they
are only learning how to talk once faced with critical national issues. Welcome
to Uganda a country aiming to halt deaths from AIDS-related conditions by the
year 2015! But anyone who cares will conclude that this is not stuff for
countries in the precarious state similar to that Uganda finds herself in.
On April 13,
2013 Kitovu Mobile held a fundraising in preparation of their celebrations
marking 25 years of caring and giving hope to those affected by HIV/AIDS. While
Kitovu Mobile is upbeat for this landmark achievement, they are also
remembering president Museveni’s hot air; he promised money towards the
construction of a building where the HIV/AIDS patients will be attended to.
Even the three vehicles he promised so as to ease transport for the doctors are
no where to be seen.
This
particular case brings to mind the billions the president incessantly donates
to his close collaborator Hassan Basajjabalaba, quack investors and the
billions he refunded to the donors after at least 60 billion shillings, meant
for the reconstruction of Northern Uganda, was robbed under Prime Minister
Amama Mbabazi’s nose. You might be right that this is Museveni’s new strategy
in fighting HIV/AIDS.
It is
further worth remembering the taunting Kizza Besigye was subjected to in 2006,
by president Museveni, when he offered himself for the presidency of Uganda.
Museveni went around telling the country that Besigye should not be elected
president because he is HIV positive!
AIDS
prevalence in Uganda should only surprise those who are not keenly following
what is going on the country. But all this is the result of government’s
failure to improve the quality of life of those living with or affected by HIV.
Those coming in to support do so because they appreciate the fact that living
positively is a challenge that needs a lot of care and support beyond the ARVs
and treated mosquito nets.
Life is
becoming hard every other day as government consolidates on its formation of a
desperate citizenry that sees no meaning in life. All these are bound to negatively
impact on the gains made against the epidemic and even worsen the conditions.
That is what is happening in Uganda under Museveni.
It is self
defeating to claim success over HIV/AIDS when people are going without food,
traumatized by poverty, there are no drugs in hospitals and patients are
treated as biological substances by rude and poorly paid medical personnel.
Ermeyas
Mekonen, an Ethiopian journalist living with HIV/AIDS made some observations to
the effect that HIV and AIDS education can improve the person’s knowledge about
HIV and AIDS but it does not necessarily result in reducing the chances of
being infected by the virus. There has to be environmental support to stimulate
and maintain.
“There is a
funny terminology that we hear among People Living With HIV and AIDS. They say
there are two kinds of people around HIV and AIDS: the PLWHA and the People
Living On HIV AIDS. While HIV is a problem to the former group it is a source
of wealth and businesses for the later.”
Justice
Ogoola called the Global Funds robbery “a tragedy in which the greatest losers
have been the people of Uganda. As the sick lay dying, the greedy middlemen
dived for the kill.”
Moral
uprightness, self discipline, social justice and a sense of commitment are
great pillars on which today’s stable and developed nations have been built.
Where these are lacking, like in Uganda, no development program can succeed.
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