Category Archives: HIV/AIDS

MALE CIRCUMCISION IN KENYA BY WHO .

By Agwanda Jakorandoh

Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Program Services (VMMCP) in Kenya has so far seen 88,217 men circumcised within Nyanza province with all clients reporting being satisfied with the services they received and complications from the surgery were low at a rate of 3.9 % with most of the complications being mild ones such as bleeding and selling.

According to a progress on VMMCP for the year 2008-09 by the National AIDS/STI Control Program (NASCOP) head Dr.Nicholas Muraguri, the number of circumcisions in Nyanza by December 2009 exceeded the program me’s goal for the first year.

“However, the high percentage of clients who were younger than fifteen particularly during the Rapid Results Initiative suggests that the program me may not yet be on track to reach 420,000 men and boys ages 15 to 49 in Nyanza by 2013” says Dr. Muraguri.

He adds that M & E data have revealed additional areas for improvement such as increasing the follow-up rates and acceptance of HIV testing and counseling.

“The Government of Kenya continues to consider evidence from M & E system and from local and international research to make decisions on how best to improve the VMMC program me and safely achieve an impact on public health within the shortest time possible” he further said.

Dr.Kim Eva Dickson a senior advisor on HIV/AIDS at World Health Organisation says that Kenya by far is in the lead in terms of how they’ve got their policy done and in the number of circumcisions they’ve done.

“What has impressed me about Kenya is the speed with which they’ve been able to move from policy to strategy and then to service delivery” Dr Dickson added.

ENDS

?AIDS Rights? Chinese activist for sex workers’ rights was done “taking a vacation”

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100802/ap_on_re_as/as_china_sex_worker_activist

Mon Aug 2, 6:23 am ET
BEIJING – Plainclothes officers detained a Chinese activist for sex workers’ rights Monday, a few days after she publicly called for prostitution to be legalized, her sister said.
Ye Haiyan was nabbed at the offices of her community group, the China Women’s Rights Workshops, and told she would be held for two or three days of “studies,” her sister, Ye Sha, told The Associated Press.
Dissidents in China are often detained by authorities with the explanation that they are “going for studies” or “taking a vacation.” Usually, they are kept at a guesthouse to prevent them from moving about freely during sensitive dates.
Last week, Ye Haiyan and a few supporters asked people in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, where she is based, to sign a petition in support of legalizing prostitution, according to an account on her group’s website. She also called for Aug. 3 — Tuesday — to be marked as “Sex Workers’ Day.”
Ye Haiyan argued that making prostitution legal would afford sex workers better protections.
When reached on her mobile phone Monday, Ye Haiyan declined to comment, saying it was not a convenient time for her to talk. Phones rang unanswered in the administrative department of Wuhan’s public security bureau.
Prostitution is rampant in China despite frequent government crackdowns, and sexual services are openly offered in massage parlors, karaoke bars and nightclubs.
Until last month, when the Ministry of Public Security issued a ban, police would sometimes organize “prostitute parades” to shame suspected sex workers. The ban came after an outcry over photos of women being paraded barefoot in the streets of Dongguan in Guangdong province, handcuffed and led by a rope around the waist.

?AIDS RIGHTS? China’s Billion-Dollar HIV- Aid Appetite

From: Kun Chang

Foreign Policy: China’s Billion-Dollar Aid Appetite

by Jack C. Chow

China has aggressively pursued Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria grants and has continued to win significant amounts with every passing year.

July 21, 2010
Jack C. Chow served as U.S. ambassador on global HIV/AIDS from 2001 to 2003 and was the lead U.S. negotiator at talks that established the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. He is currently distinguished service professor of global health at Carnegie Mellon University in Heinz College’s School of Public Policy and Management.

Back in 2001, I was the lead U.S. negotiator in international talks meant to transform the way that poor countries fight some of the world’s most pernicious diseases — HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Our vision looked like this: Instead of each country spending on its own, rich countries would pool donations into one coordinated fund that would give grants to help resource-strapped countries purchase medicines, build health programs, and prevent the diseases from spreading.

We imagined the bulk of the money ending up in places like Lesotho, Haiti, and Uganda, where these three diseases have reached crisis levels. So it might surprise and concern you — as much as it still does me — to learn that one of the top grant recipients isn’t in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, or impoverished Central Asia. It’s a country with $2.5 trillion in foreign currency reserves: China.

Over the eight years since the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria first launched, China has applied for and been awarded nearly $1 billion in grants, becoming the fourth-largest recipient of funds behind Ethiopia, India, and Tanzania. Already, the country has drawn nearly $500 million from this credit line and soon expects to receive $165 million in new grants. China’s aggregate award from the fund is nearly three times larger than that of South Africa, one of the most affected countries from these three diseases.

Moreover, China has won malaria grant money totaling $149 million (and $89 million more might be on the way) — in a country where only 38 deaths from the mosquito-borne illness were reported last year.

That is more than the $122 million awarded to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which reported nearly 25,000 malaria deaths during the same period. In fact, only seven sub-Saharan African countries receive more malaria aid than China — and 29 countries in Africa get less. Combined, those 29 countries report 64,000 deaths from the disease each year.

China has aggressively pursued Global Fund grants and has continued to win significant amounts with every passing year. Beijing does make a nominal contribution to the fund of $2 million annually, meaning that it has donated $16 million over the last eight years.

By comparison, the United States, the leading donor, has committed $5.5 billion, and France has offered $2.5 billion over the same period.

These contributing countries expect no financial return for their gift, but China has recouped its spending by 60 times.

Over the eight years since the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria first launched, China has applied for and been awarded nearly $1 billion in grants.

Even more alarming, China’s persistent appetite threatens to undermine the entire premise behind the Global Fund. The organization’s leadership is trying to solicit between $13 billion and $20 billion to cover its next three years of operations — a tall order at a time of global recession.

Donors will grow even more reluctant if they realize that substantial funds are being awarded to a country that can more than pay for its own health programs.

How did China ever become eligible for grants in the first place? In short, because of a loophole. The Global Fund decides eligibility for grants based on the World Bank’s classification system, which divides countries by income. High-income countries such as the United States, the European industrial countries, and Japan are ineligible.

Low-income countries, including many in sub-Saharan Africa, are grant-eligible. In between, so-called lower-middle-income countries like China are eligible if the grants are part of a cost-sharing program through which the fund pays up to 65 percent and the country pays the rest. (China stays in this lower-middle-income category because its huge population keeps per capita figures down.)

The country competes with the likes of Bolivia, Cameroon, and India in this category. But because the fund’s pot of money isn’t allocated by income group, any grants that China wins reduce the remaining money available for all eligible countries.

For a country like Cameroon, cost-sharing grants make a lot of sense. By giving part of the full amount, the fund can spur the host government into investing more of its discretionary budget in health.

The extra cash can build health infrastructure and capacity, preparing the country to wean itself from foreign funds. But in China’s case, the argument for a Global Fund grant is tenuous at best.

During the depths of the world economic crisis in 2008, China put forth a massive economic stimulus package of $586 billion that included new health and education spending of $27 billion.

The government announced its intention to boost rural health coverage with $125 billion in spending over the next several years. Even a fraction of that promised amount would negate any need by China to draw upon the Global Fund.

This is not to say, of course, that China’s health system does not face formidable challenges. Indeed, global health policymakers worry that HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis in particular could rise dramatically as the country urbanizes and industrializes and a new middle class veers away from traditional social mores.

Everyone remembers the SARS outbreak in 2002 and 2003 that practically shut down major cities in China. And beyond specific threats, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the chief implementer of the Global Fund portfolio and officiator of the government’s public health strategy, has hard work ahead to build up China’s health workforce and medical infrastructure.

But China might want these grants for reasons having more to do with politics than public health. The Health Ministry is the only member of China’s policymaking State Council not led by a political party member.

As such, its ability to compete for domestic funds pales in comparison with other assertive, powerful ministries led by longstanding party leaders. So the Health Ministry might be driven to external funding by political necessity. Or, China might value obtaining the technical assistance of international health agencies such as the World Health Organization, UNAIDS, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Global Fund grants provide a means of securing their advice and services. China’s participation on the fund’s board might also be useful to Beijing’s global politics, confirming its importance on the world stage.

Whatever benefits China gains from seeking grants, however, stack up poorly against expensive opportunity costs exacted upon needier countries. The $1 billion awarded to China could have been used by the poorest countries to distribute 67 million anti-malarial bed nets, 4.5 million curative tuberculosis treatments, or nearly 2 million courses of anti-retroviral therapy for AIDS patients (a number equivalent to all those living with the disease in Kenya).

It is intriguing that health ministers from the poorest countries have expressed neither concern nor opposition to China winning grants. Nor has there been any substantial public challenge to or debate about the money China has received from the Global Fund.

Part of the reason might be structural; the fund’s large 26-member board (which includes representatives of countries, regions, organizations, and the Global Fund itself) operates based on consensus, and its meetings are time-constrained forums that pressure members to make rapid decisions.

Changing eligibility policy, for example to exclude China, would entail time-intensive negotiations that may well pit groups of grantees against one another. The board also approves grants en bloc, relying upon the advice of technical experts who review them for feasibility and public health impact, not fairness, balance, or a country’s ability to pay.

Even so, there is likely more behind the silence than just procedure. For many of the poorer countries that lose out, opposing China in international forums would risk incurring Beijing’s diplomatic wrath.

Health ministers are skittish to imperil their country’s broader interactions with China, which in the case of African countries, often entails Chinese loans, grants, infrastructure projects, and investment — and indeed, even further, health aid. In turn, African countries seeking access to the burgeoning Chinese market must curry Beijing’s favor.

Any country that openly opposes China at the Global Fund might see these economic links broken or be put at a disadvantage to competitors. And so the neediest countries endure a loss of grant money to China through their collective silence.

Donor governments have also been mute or reluctant to oppose China at the Global Fund, perhaps for similar reasons of not wishing to provoke a reaction that impacts other diplomatic or political equities elsewhere.

In the United States, neither Congress nor the White House has voiced open concern that an amount equivalent to President Barack Obama’s entire fiscal 2011 Global Fund budget request of $1 billion has gone to a country that can afford to pay its own way.

This has left the fund’s leadership as the only front left for trying to change China’s stance. Based on China’s national income and the rate of other donor contributions, the Global Fund recommends that China should give $96 million over the next three years, amounting to 16 times its current annual donation.

In 2007, prior to China’s hosting of a board meeting in Kunming, the fund asked China’s government to up its donor commitment, but the appeal went nowhere. In June, with fundraising pressures escalating, the fund’s executive director, Michel Kazatchkine, met in Beijing with Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang, who issued a vague promise to cooperate with international organizations to expand disease prevention and treatment, but made no announcement to refrain from taking new grants or signaled any intent to become a major donor.

Not even a rival country’s actions seem to have convinced Beijing. In recent years, nearby Russia has transformed itself from recipient to donor, and it has done so under arguably less favorable economic conditions than those in China today. In 2006, then President Vladimir Putin pledged to repay the Global Fund $270 million over four years, covering the past assistance it received, and announced $156 million in new domestic spending for HIV treatment. Now four years out, Russia has paid in $250 million to the Global Fund, essentially fulfilling Putin’s pledge.

It is audacious for China to assert that it needs international health assistance on par with the world’s poorest countries. In fact, at the same time it is drawing from the Global Fund, China is building its entire global image as one of economic growth, accumulating wealth and international stature.

To boost its public profile and prestige, China spent billions to host the Beijing Olympics and the Shanghai World Expo. Surely it could spend another $1 billion of its cash on health as well.

And why not take it one step further? By becoming a Global Fund donor, China could win acclaim with the West and the world’s poorest — earning exactly the kind of respect that a rising power deserves.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128664027

__._,_.____,_._,___

Chang Kun

General Coordinator of China Youth HIV/AIDS Assembly
Board Member and Co-founder of Beijing Yirenping Center

Phone: 133 4910 8944 ; 138 1072 6838
Skype: Chinachangkun
MSN?13349108944@189.cn
Email?changkun2010@gmail.com
Personal Web: http://www.changkun.org

KENYA: WILL COUPLES BOYCOTT THIS VIRILE COMBAT?

Dear Sir/madam,

I must admit that last week I came across one of the most dramatic headlines arising out of a mounting inability by some scientists to cope with the HIV/AIDS scourge. We may be used to scientists coming up with a raft of measures to stem the rising tide of the HIV/AIDS scourge but that is nothing compared to what some inspired scientists came up with last week. They talked about couples (and even commercial sex workers and their faithful clients) boycotting from this uplifting experience for a month as a means of reducing new infections. Really!

Allow me to say with a lot of conviction that this latest strategy (if it qualifies to be called a strategy) will not work in Kenya. First and foremost, July and August are the coldest months here. They are the sorts of our winter. I guess that the possibility of a couple full of virility attempting to even think of such a boycott will be remotest. At this time, people have a craving for this natural warmth so much than food itself. This explains why Kenya has a baby boom nine months after this “winter.”

Secondly, many people in this third world country live below the poverty line. Anyone who has gone through this debilitating experience will tell you that poor folks resort to sex as the only means to overcome the pangs of hunger and a litany of other social problems albeit temporarily. If these scientists have been wondering why these poor chaps despite the excruciating poverty, still adorn permanent glees on their faces, they should wonder no more. Sex provides the much needed fissure through which the pent up frustrations can temporarily be let out by fellows whose spirits have been ruffled by poverty. It is sought of an anesthesia.

So anybody coming up with a mundane suggestion that promises to erase these glees from their faces runs the risk of being called insane. That is why my polygamous old man back in my rural village is fond of declaring to all and sundry that he may be materially poor but that he is very rich when it comes to counting the number of children he has!

But the joke of it all is in the implementation of the proposal for the simple reason that it is extremely difficult to monitor and evaluate its success. I bet its architects do not have the capacity to install CCTV cameras in every bedroom to check the proximity of couples in the comfort of their bedrooms.

That is why these folks are charging that these scientists have grossly misdirected their efforts, that instead of upping their efforts in searching for a cure of this disease, they advocate a month long abstinence which in their estimation is only effective to couples whose muscular strength and virility has worn down to a thread. In other words they do not see the reason why a soldier who still has a good stock of ammunition should retreat from this combat.

TOME FRANCIS,

BUMULA,

http://twitter.com/tomefrancis

USA: Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi: Obama Govt Gives Kenya Billions in HIV and Aids Programs

Hi People as Joe Biden passed by Kenya he left behind below news

“The United States has named the first eight recipients of its new Global Health Initiative (GHI) Plus grant, aimed at strengthening health systems in developing countries.

Countries including Ethiopia, Kenya and Malawi will receive additional US government resources as part of the six-year, US$63 billion initiative to help strengthen national health systems by improving supply chain management, health worker retention, and information management, said Nicole Schiegg of the US Agency for Development (USAID).”

As many of us our relatives friends succumb to Aids and Hiv let us hope these grants will help them

Source Interplus news


Thanks
Gibson Amenya

Launch of New Vaginal Ring Study for HIV Prevention

BY DICKENS WASONGA

A study has kicked off in East and Southern Africa which may give women in the continent a reason to smile. International Partnership for Microbicides-a nonprofit product development partnership has initiated the first trial clinical trials among African women of a vaginal ring containing an antiretroviral drug that could be used in future to prevent HIV transmission during sex.

The clinical trial,known as IPM 015- tests the safety and acceptability of an innovative approach that adapts a successful technology from the reproductive health field to give women around the world a tool to protect themselves from HIV infections.

According to IPM’s Chief Executive Officer, Dr Zeda Rosenberg, vaginal rings are commonly used in Europe and the U.S for hormone delivery and could be well-suited to deliver HIV prevention drugs for women in developing countries.

”This study will provide key information on the safety and acceptability of this technology for HIV prevention. it is an important step forward in our efforts to give women options they can use to safeguard their health.”Said Dr. Rosenberg.

Since 2001, women in developed countries have successfully used vaginal rings, such as the NuvaRing®, ESTRING® and Femring®, for birth control and hormonal therapy.

These rings are appealing because they are self-administered, discreet and provide protection for a month or more.

The vaginal ring being tested in IPM 015 is an ARV-based microbicide — a class of vaginal products currently being developed to prevent HIV infection in women. ARVs have revolutionized HIV treatment and have already been proven to reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

They are now being tested for their ability to prevent HIV infection.

The vaginal ring used in IPM 015 is made of flexible silicone, is durable and would be easy to distribute — making it well suited for use in developing countries. Each ring slowly releases 25 mg of the ARV drug dapivirine over the course of 28 days, potentially providing sustained protection against HIV.

The ring is manufactured by IPM, which has a royalty-free license for dapivirine from Tibotec Therapeutics, a division of Johnson & Johnson.

“Biology and gender inequality continue to place women at greater risk of disease and death, particularly in developing countries,” said Elizabeth Mataka, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for AIDS in Africa.

“All too often, women are not in a position to control their sexual health or protect themselves from HIV infection. By empowering women with new tools to protect their health, this ring technology could bring hope where there was none before.”

IPM 015 is a Phase I/II expanded safety trial that will compare the dapivirine ring with a placebo ring containing no active drug among 280 volunteers across Africa.

Women in South Africa have begun volunteering for the trial, and it is hoped that other African nations will start the same study shortly. The women volunteers will be randomly assigned to use either the dapivirine or the placebo ring, which will be replaced once monthly for a three-month period.

The vaginal ring containing dapivirine has already been shown to be safe as tested in four prior IPM clinical trials among women in Europe, with another trial ongoing. If IPM 015 further confirms the safety and acceptability of the product among women in Africa, a Phase III program to test the ability of dapivirine rings to prevent HIV infection is scheduled to begin in Africa in 2011, with results due in 2015.

Every day more than 3,000 women worldwide become infected with HIV. And HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death for women aged 15-49 years in Africa.

Despite this challenge, women lack a discreet method to prevent infection. Current prevention options may be impractical for women who lack the power to ensure that their male partners use condoms or remain faithful, and for those who are married, want to have children or are at risk of violence.

The initiation of IPM 015 was announced at the Women Deliver conference in Washington, D.C., the largest conference focused on maternal health in more than a decade.

“Women and girls must be given the tools to protect themselves from HIV infection,” said Jill Sheffield, President of Women Deliver. “The contraceptive ring has been a formidable tool for women seeking more control over their reproductive health, and it is wonderful to see HIV researchers adapt this technology to tackle the single biggest killer of young women.

The simple fact is that we will never be able to fully ensure the health of women and girls globally without halting the spread of HIV and AIDS.”

IPM is a nonprofit product development partnership established in 2002 to prevent HIV transmission by supporting the development and availability of safe and effective vaginal microbicides and other HIV prevention methods in developing countries where women are at greatest risk for infection.

ENDS.

Kenya: Criteria for Aids funding reviewed

Folks,

Yes, good idea, we all want to have control from the spread of HIV Aids and support funding to provide remedy.

But,

In the re-structuring for the Aids funding proposal, I hope Beth Mugo will this time round provide details and documentation for public information, on specific target group for Aid Patients, but not incorporating bulkanization of the previously disputed cutting of organ tips in the Greater Luo Nyanza Region or she have to give tangible satisfactory reason why and how with confirming %age data indicating those tips are the reason or the source or root cause of the HIV pandemic spread in Kenya.

Best Regards,

– – – – – – – – – – –

Criteria for Aids funding reviewed

By PAUL JUMA

In Summary

Kenya upbeat Round Ten bid to Global Fund will succeed

The Global Fund’s revised criteria for funding has injected fresh optimism into the Kenyan government whose proposals were rejected last year.

In April, the board of the Global Fund for Aids, TB and Malaria decided that the criteria for funding will be based on a country’s disease burden and poverty index, besides the usual recommendations by the technical review panel.

Public Health and Sanitation minister Beth Mugo on Monday said she hoped Kenya’s call for funding in Round Ten will bear fruit.

“This timely consideration will go a long way in ensuring that the Global Fund directs its resources to the areas of greatest need,” Mrs Mugo said.

However, she challenged the Fund to reduce red tape in its procedures, adding that it takes a lot of time for the funds to reach beneficiaries.

Kenya missed out on Round Nine of the funding last year — a Sh21 billion grant — putting the lives of thousands of Aids patients who rely on anti-retrovirals (ARVs) at risk.

Mrs Mugo was speaking in Nairobi at the start of a Global Fund meeting for East Africa and the Indian Ocean region.

At the meeting, sustainability of the ARV programme, particularly in Kenya, came under the spotlight.

More than 320,000 Aids patients in Kenya depend on the life-saving drugs, in a programme that is mainly supported by the Global Fund.

Competition

Medical Services permanent secretary James ole Kiyiapi blamed the lack of coordination among those involved in the war against Aids for the rejection of the funding proposal.

Ironically, competition for control of donor cash between the two Health ministries blocked the funding, causing shortages of essential drugs in most public hospitals.

On Monday, Mrs Mugo also asked the Treasury to increase the budget allocation to the health sector.

KENYA: VCT IN ALL NYANZA PROVINCE’S CONSTITUENCIES?

from: erasto agwanda

By Agwanda Jowi.

The Government through the National Aids Control Council (NACC) is set to establish Voluntary and Counseling and Testing Centers (VCT) in all the Constituencies in Nyanza Province in an effort to curb the escalating HIV/Aids prevalence rate.

According to the National Aids Control Council (NACC) Nyanza Provincial field officer on HIV/Aids Mr. Edwin Lwanya, the centers are to be established in remote areas at a total cost of 103.2 million shillings following concern that HIV/Aids prevalence rate in the region were on the rise.

Mr. Lwanya said each of the 32 constituencies would receive 3.2 million shillings under the programme in an effort to ensure the essential services are availed to the rural folk.

Speaking to KNA in his office in Kisumu, he Field Officer said the National Aids Control Council has allocated another 29.4 million shillings under the Total War Against Aids(TOWA) round three porgramme to fund Non-Governmental Organization and Community Based Organization in all the districts in the province.

The Official expressed concern over the escalating HIV/Aids prevalence rate that has increased from 14.5% in 2008 to current rate of 14.9%.

“The Government has put new strategies to curb the increase by initiating new intervention strategies” he said.

Mr. Lwanya said negative attitude towards use of condoms, high poverty levels that leads to prostitution especially along the fishing beaches among the fishing mongers and ignorance about the use of Anti-retroviral (ARVs) have contributed immensely to the increase in HIV/Aids infection rate.

He said HIV/Aids prevalence rate was highest along the beaches given that women involved in the business are asked for sex favors by fishermen.

“It has also emerged that some people in the region are engaging in casual sex believing that the use of ARVs would prevent them from getting infected, which is not true” he added.

He said among the measures being implemented include training of fish mongers to establish entrepreneurship so that they are not vulnerable.

“The Government is also microfinance the women fish mongers so that they do not rely solely on men to earn a living.

He said the district that were being targeted are those bordering Lake Victoria and include Bondo, Rarieda, Kisumu East and West, Homabay, Suba and Rachuonyo.

He said other moves include behavior change communication and education (BCCE) to fishermen and truck drivers, considered to be the most at risk groups.

Another strategy the NACC is using is the male medical circumcision that has since seen over 90,000 males circumcised since September 2008 when the initiative was launched by the Prime Minister Mr. Raila Odinga.

Among organizations involved in fight against the pandemic in the province include Aphia 2 Nyanza, Amref, Nyanza Productive health, and World Vision.

ENDS…

Uganda: Amorous Catholic priest to face prosecution for rapping two girls

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

THE Director of Public Prosecution, Richard Butera, has ordered the arrest of a Catholic priest in Nebbi district who allegedly defiled two girls, and possibly infected them with HIV.

Butera yesterday said evidence was sufficient to charge the Rev. Fr. Santos Constatino Wapokura. “That matter is clear: He should be charged,” Butera said in an interview.

He explained that the resident state attorney had already been instructed to charge the priest.

“He should have appeared in court and if he has not, I wonder why,” he said. In an earlier interview, the head of criminal investigations, Edward Ochom, ruled out settling the matter out of court, saying the offence was capital.

“We can afford to do that for chicken thieves, but not for a matter like this. He should be charged,” Ochom said.

The directive, Ochom said, had been communicated to the Police upcountry. It was unthinkable for a suspect on such a charge, he said, to be let off the hook out-of-court.

However, despite Ochom’s and Butera’s orders, the priest had not yet been re-arrested by press time.

Asked about the matter, the district Police commander, Alex Wabwire, in turn asked: “What is your interest in the case?”

The release of the priest had shocked the nation. Women rights activists in Nebbi are planning a demonstration over the matter.

Wapokura, 45, the parish priest of Pakwach, is accused of defiling a 14-year-old girl who was serving in the church. Wapokura had been in Police custody twice over the same allegations. His latest release was ordered by the resident state attorney, Innocent Obale, purportedly to allow the parties resolve the matter out of court.

Upon his arrest last month, the Police said the clergyman tested positive for HIV and upgraded his offence to aggravated defilement. He will be hanged if convicted. The priest dismissed the allegations as a ploy to taint his name.

One of the complainants told the Police that Wapokura would often ask her to go to his house, where he would follow her and force her into sex. On another occasion, the girl alleged, she was at the priest’s home with other visitors when Wapokura sexually assaulted her after sending away the other people.

Wapokura’s woes add to the long list of accusations of sexual misconduct by Catholic priests, which have rocked the Church lately. Another Catholic priest was arrested and charged with defilement in Gulu recently.

Worldwide, the church has been forced to pay out millions of dollars to victims

Ends
leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

Check out “2010 CALL FOR NOMINATIONS-The Annual Award for Excellence in HIV and AIDS Communication in Africa” on Baraza La Taifa

From: Baraza La Taifa

Baraza La Taifa. Kenya

Baraza La Taifa Check out the discussion ‘2010 CALL FOR NOMINATIONS-The Annual Award for Excellence in HIV and AIDS Communication in Africa’
The Annual Award for Excellence in HIV and AIDS Communication in Africa
2010-Call for Nomination.

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Discussion posted by Baraza La Taifa:

The African Network for Strategic Communication in Health and Development (AfriComNet) is pleased to announce the call for nominations fo…

Discussion link:
2010 CALL FOR NOMINATIONS-The Annual Award for Excellence in HIV and AIDS Communication in Africa

About Baraza La Taifa
Baraza La Taifa is a lobby group geared towards,sensitizing /engaging Kenyan to vote YES the draft constitution on august referendum.

Uganda: Catholic Priest who tested HIV positive arrested for defiling a 14 year old girl

HIV/AIDS POSITIVE CATHOLIC PRIEST IN PAKWACH UGANDA ARRESTED FOR DEFILING A 14 YEAR GIRL

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

A senior Catholic priest based in Pakwach town in Nebbi district has been arrested by the Police on allegations of defiling a 14-year-old girl, who served in the church.

The district criminal investigations officer, Henry Mulindwa, said the Rev. Fr. Santos ConstatinoWapokura was first arrested last week in Pakwach when the girl’s parents registered a complaint.

Mulindwa said another 14-year-old girl had also reported to the Police, saying the priest also forced her into sex early last year.

Wapokura, 45, the parish priest for Pakwach, is also HIV-positive, Mulindwa said.

Therefore, the Police upgraded his case from simple to aggravated defilement.
He was, however, shortly released on bond under unclear circumstances, which the district Police headquarters in Nebbi are investigating.

“This is a capital offence. When I heard about it, I called for the file and ordered the priest’s re-arrest on Monday,” Mulindwa said. Mulindwa explained that the victim was a Primary Five pupil.

The girl told the Police that Wapokura would often ask her to go to his house, where he would follow her and force her into sex.

On another occasion, the girl narrated, she was at the priest’s home with other visitors. Father Wapokura reportedly sent away the other people and forced the girl into sex.

Wapokura, who is detained at Nebbi Central Police Station, denies the allegations, which he described as a ploy by his enemies to tarnish his name.
Wapokura was at the helm of celebrations to mark the Centenary of the Catholic faith in northern Uganda held in Pakwach on March 20.

The Police said his file had been forwarded to the resident state attorney for sanctioning, after which he will appear before court. Another Catholic priest was arrested and charged with defilement in Gulu recently.

The cases add to the long list of accusations of sexual misconduct by Catholic priests, which have rocked the Church lately. In America, the Church has paid millions of dollars to victims.

Pope Benedict has also been accused of trying to cover up the crimes in an attempt to preserve the image of the church, which forbids its priests from marrying.

Activists in Britain are considering arresting the Pope when he travels to London later this year.

Ends.

DOCTORS REJECT CIRCUMCISION AS A PREVENTION AGAINST HIV INFECTION – NYANZA BE WARNED!

Doctors Opposing Circumcision
HIV Statement
The Use of Male Circumcision to Prevent HIV Infection
A statement by Doctors Opposing Circumcision

Introduction.

There have been a number of exaggerated claims made for the alleged efficacy of male circumcision in preventing female-to-male infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) This statement examines those claims and puts them in proper perspective Cultural bias.When studying circumcision, cultural bias must be considered:

Circumcision practices are largely culturally determined and as a result there are strong beliefs and opinions surrounding its practice. It is important to acknowledge that researchers’ personal biases and the dominant circumcision practices of their respective countries may influence their interpretation of findings.

More than 50 percent of infant boys in North America still are subjected to non-therapeutic circumcision. There is a well known cultural bias in favor of circumcision in North America, which may influence doctors at the National Institutes of Health as well as those directing the studies. Doctors conducting these studies may not possess the necessary attributes of neutrality and objectivity. Ideally, researchers from circumcising cultures, circumcised themselves, would recuse themselves from considering the data.

The United States has the highest rate of HIV infection and the highest rate of male circumcision in the industrialized world. Male circumcision, therefore, cannot reasonably be thought to prevent HIV infection.
There are many methods of HIV transmission, including:
* mother-to-child infection,
* transfusion of tainted blood
* infection with non-sterile needles used in health care,
* infection by homosexual and heterosexual anal intercourse,
* infection by needle sharing to inject illegal drugs,
* traditional African scarring practices,
* tribal (ritual) circumcision,
* female circumcision,
* male-to-female heterosexual transmission, and female-to-male heterosexual transmission

Male circumcision might only reduce infection by the last method, so the overall influence on the HIV epidemic in Africa, at best, would be likely to be slight, however, the risk of male-to-female transmission is much higher than that of female-to-male transmission, so a means of partial prevention that targets only the second means at the expense of the first would be counterproductive.

There is no indication that male circumcision would protect women. Viral load is the chief predictor of the risk of HIV transmission. Malaria infection increases viral loads, so enhances infectivity. Male circumcision would not reduce viral loads and would not reduce infectivity to the female partner.

Condom usage.
Condoms have been shown to be effective at preventing HIV transmission. The use of condoms is necessary to prevent infection whether or not the male is circumcised.

Effect on condom use.
Male circumcision removes nerves from the penis and causes significant loss of sexual sensitivity and function. For this reason, many circumcised men are reluctant to use condoms. A program of mass circumcision may reduce condom usage and have an adverse effect on the overall HIV infection incidence.

Vaginal abrasion.
“Dry sex” is practiced in sub-Saharan Africa. Women place various drying agents in their vagina to absorb vaginal lubrication. This practice may itself cause abrasion and fissures that provide a portal for the HIV virus. Circumcision also reduces vaginal lubrication, curtails the gliding action, increases friction and vaginal abrasions, so, when combined with “dry sex”, may increase the risk of female HIV infection through abrasions. The combination of dry sex and circumcision appears to sharply increase the risk of male-to-female transmission of HIV. A recent preliminary report found that the female partners of circumcised males experience higher rates of HIV infection.

Relevance to developed nations.
These African studies were carried out in HIV “hot-spots” places where the incidence of HIV infection in the population is high and where the method of transmission is heterosexual intercourse. They are not relevant to developed nations, such as the United States, where the incidence of infection is low and where the predominant methods of transmission are through homosexual anal intercourse or through needle-sharing by drug addicts.

Circumcision of children.
These RCTs, which studied HIV transmission among adults in Africa, cannot be used to support the practice of non-therapeutic circumcision of children. Infant boys do not engage in sexual intercourse so they are not subject to sexually-transmitted HIV infection. They, however, are subject to various complications of circumcision, including infection through an open circumcision wound with various pathogens, such as deadly CA-MRSA. Other risks include hemorrhage, exsanguination, and death; and various surgical accidents, including urethral fistula, penile denudation, and traumatic amputation of the glans penis. By the time today?s newborn boys became sexually active, HIV vaccine is likely to be available so circumcision today, in an attempt to prevent HIV infection in the distant future, is contraindicated.

The high infant mortality rate in the African countries hardest hit by the HIV epidemic means many children will die before they become sexually active, further vitiating any protective effect of infant circumcision. The time, effort and money would be better spent on community health measures that would preserve their lives and those of their parents.

Because of their minority, children cannot grant consent, so any non-therapeutic circumcision of a child is a human rights violation and ethically inappropriate.

Discussion.
Effective methods of reducing HIV infection include education and behavior change. Abstinence before marriage and fidelity after marriage offer men and women the greatest protection in avoiding HIV/AIDS transmission.

Men who have been circumcised may consider themselves immune to HIV and at no risk to their female partner. That, however, is not the case. Circumcised men may still contract HIV and pass it on to their next partner.

The reported complication rate of 1.7 percent seems unreasonably low. Williams & Kapila estimated the incidence of complications at 2-10 percent; In the survey by Kim & Pang (2006), 48 percent reported decreased masturbatory pleasure, 63 percent reported increased masturbatory difficulty and 20 percent reported a worsened sex life after circumcision.

The authors of the RCTs have engaged in the promotion of circumcision. Van Howe and colleagues argue that their true motivation may be the introduction of universal male circumcision, using fear of HIV as the tool with which to accomplish their goals.

Social problems.
The introduction of male circumcision into a non-circumcising society may present problems such as:
* adverse psychological and sexual effects caused by the diminishment and desensitization of the penis,
* increased antisocial behavior,
* violations of human rights,
* violations of laws that protect children, and
* inability to discontinue male circumcision when the need for it no longer exists.

Politics.
The HIV/AIDS epidemic is quite severe in several African nations. In some areas, a high percentage of the population is HIV+.

Public health organizations are under intense pressure to solve the problem.

The use of male circumcision to prevent HIV infection is akin to a drowning man grasping at a straw. Although male circumcision is likely to be proposed for political reasons, it is likely to have little effect on the overall incidence of HIV infection and may cause later problems. According to Ntozi:
It is important that, while circumcision interventions are being planned, several points must be considered carefully. If the experiment fails, Africans are likely to feel abused and exploited by scientists who recommended the circumcision policy. In a region highly sensitive to previous colonial exploitation and suspicious of the biological warfare origin of the virus, failure of circumcision is likely to be a big issue. Those recommending it should know how to handle the political implications.

Opposing evidence.
Both the public and the medical community must guard against being overwhelmed by the hyperbolic promotion of male circumcision and must receive these new studies with extreme caution. There is contradictory evidence that male circumcision is not as effective as proponents claim. One study found that male circumcision had no protective effect for women and another study found that male circumcision increased risk for women. Grosskurth found more HIV infection in circumcised men. Barongo et al. found no evidence that lack of circumcision is a risk factor for HIV infection. A study from India found little difference between circumcised and non-circumcised men in the conjugal relationship. A study carried out in South Africa found that male circumcision offered only a slight protective effect. A study carried out among American naval personnel found no difference in the incidence of HIV infection between non-circumcised and circumcised men.

The future.
The development of a vaccine is the best hope for the solution to the HIV epidemic. Several teams of scientists are working to develop vaccines that will prevent infection with HIV and other vaccines that will treat those already infected. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has contributed $287 million to 16 research groups for development of a vaccine.

Conclusion.
Male circumcision is a highly emotive operation that generates strong feelings in many men, especially those who have been circumcised, as have most North Americans. The trauma associated with the operation may generate a desire to repeat or reenact the trauma. 62 Other men may feel a need to justify their own circumcision by the generation of claims of health benefits. The medical literature is full of protective claims for various diseases, such as sexually transmitted disease (formerly called venereal disease), male and female cancers, and urinary tract infection. All such claims have been disproved.

The RCTs on which the current claims are based have been carried out by men who have a previous history of promoting circumcision. DOC has little confidence in such studies, especially since contradictory evidence exists.

Male circumcision may increase male-to-female transmission of HIV and mitigate any reduction in female-to-male transmission. A preliminary report confirms the increased risk to women.

Instituting a program of male circumcision is of dubious value. It will divert resources from proven methods of epidemic control and it may generate a false sense of security in males who have been circumcised. The desensitization of the penis that frequently results from male circumcision is likely to make men less willing to use condoms. A program of male circumcision very likely may worsen the epidemic.

The epidemic in Africa may have little to do with lack of circumcision and everything to do with the percentage of the female population engaged in female sex work. Talbot (2007) has established a correlation between the number of female sex workers in the population and the level of HIV infection.

Calls are being heard for the circumcision of children although (assuming that male circumcision is effective at controlling female-to-male infection) this could not be helpful until the child becomes sexually active. As previously stated, the non-therapeutic excision of healthy body parts from non-consenting children is a violation of human rights and medically unethical. Therefore, the true motivation of the circumcision proponents must be questioned. It may be perpetuation of neonatal circumcision, not control of HIV.

DOC believes that more emphasis on education, behavior change?such as abstinence before marriage and fidelity after marriage, provision of condoms, treatment of other sexually transmitted diseases, treatment of genital ulcer disease, control of malaria, and provision of safe health care would be more likely to produce beneficial results.

______________________________________________________________
Otieno Mbare, Dr.Sc.(Econ. & B.Adm), Research Fellow
Åbo Akademi University
Institute for Advance Management Systems Research
Lemminkäinengatan 14 (office location: Fabriksgatan 7A 1)
Tel. +358 2 2154 567 (Off1)+358 2 2154 976 (Off) +358 40 5341 996
http://iamsr.abo.fi
Email: Otieno.Mbare@abo.fi, awachtin@yahoo.com
20520 ÅBO
Finland

People who live on borrowed culture often go to extremes that their models and mentors had never intended. Varindra Tarzie Vittachi (1921 -), Sri-Lankan born writer

KENYA TARGETS TO CIRCUMCISE 1 MILLION MEN IN FOUR YEARS TIME

KENYA TARGETS TO CIRCUMCISE 1 MILLION MEN IN FOUR YEARS TIME

By Dickens Wasonga in Kisumu

Kenya’s ministry of health is targetting to circumcise an estimated one million men in the next four years during the ongoing male circumcision for HIV prevention program.

The program, which aims to reduce the number of new HIV infections in the country by improving and expanding the provision of safe and voluntary male circumcision services, was lauched 3 years ago, and has since seen 90,000 men go for the cut in Nyanza province, where the project began.

In a speech read on his behalf by the member of parliament for Kisumu town west, Hon Olago Aluoch, during the third stakeholder’s meeting on voluntary medical male circumcision, at Kisumu’s Tom Mboya labour college, the medical services minister, prof Anyan’g Nyon’go said public health experts have advised on the need to carry out safe, medical circumcision as a new intervention, to prevent HIV alongside the other practised methods, which includes abstinence, being faithful, and correct and consistent condom use.

The minister observed that the strategy was embraced after three clinical trials conducted among uncircumcised men showed that being circumcised drastically reduced the men’s chances of becoming infected with HIV.

The studies conducted in Kisumu, Kenya, Uganda and South Africa showed that male circumcision lowered the risk of HIV infection by about 60 percent.

Out of the total number of men expected to undergo the cut in the country, Nyanza will account for 430,000 men who fall between the ages of 15 to 49 years.

The government chose to first roll out the program in the province where culturally men are not circumcised. The region is also leading on HIV prevalence, which stand at 16 percent, higher than even the national average, according to statistics from the ministry.

The circumcision services are provided free in government health facilities and in various identified outreach centers.

Family Health International(FHI), the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Engender Health are partners of the consortium which carry out the project in close collaboration with the ministry of public health and medical services, and the Nyanza Reproductive Health Society, in support of a national effort led by the government of Kenya.

Its funded by a grant to FHI from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation from 2008 to 2013.

Even though the program has recieved huge support from the local elites, particularly amongst the area’s political class, who include the prime minister Raila Odinga, the community’s elders have given it a lukewarm welcome.

Led by its council chairman, ker Riaga Ogalo, the elders still appear to want to cling to the community’s old ways and constantly encourage the locals to stick to cultural preservation so as not to lose their identity.

However, going by the swelling numbers of males rushing to undergo the cut, especially by the young men from the area, it’s clear many people would do anything to beat the scourge.

Speaking at the same function, the Kisumu east district commissioner, Mr Mabeya Mogaka warned those who deliberately infect others with the virus in the town to watch ou,t because the long arm of the law will soon catch up with them.

ENDS.

LIT TO OK CHWER REM

Today at 8:25am
By Carol Rehema

LIT TO OK CHWER REMO
We live at a time when the future looks so gloomy; the site of “skeleton-looking”, diarrhoearing and vomiting. Patients in
hospitals are “bare-faced” testimony.Subjectively,the future lest squarely.One personal
decision, the rate at which we are losing dear Kenyans in this menace, A.I.D.S. is alarming! It is painful yes but bleeds not.

LIT TO OK CHWER REMO
Piny obiro mayore.Ochomo dhano tielo apar gi ariyo, tip! Ogoyi nyonga, tew!!Kar ruakruok to lonyruok; kapok okendruok to ipimruok.Tiegni marach otho e wich; resruok nowuog kune? Osiepewa mabeyo osenindo; wedewa ma wageno osedhi;moko bende ni e yo.Viwanja opong’o miere;mayatima wanatafuta pekoe;gates are being closed down..Eee…ma kuyo matamre kod nono jowadwa!! Chuny dhano kudo…koro ogik.

LIT TO OK CHWER REMO
Dhano wuotho opoklo nono;maiti mapok olandi.Ng’ama di sungre ni ler kendo ngima korie piny jowadwa,mmmhh!!!Iwacho mag dhogi itieko;..’gola uru oko,tera uru oko’Kuenda msalani kila wakati,kwani huyu mtu hachoki? ‘Wek mulo kanyo’ ;kwani wewe ni yai ukiguzwa unavunjika ama wewe ni moto wachoma? Chuny min oae joka ma! Irianori ariana.wachni lich mama ka masira ma pok olandi nyikwa Ramogi! Dhano chunye ler alera.Ka kun to dong’ de okun;ka ringo de oringi to odoko ni aywer ok we gunde.Mwandu ilunyo pep!!! Dhok itieko e kul,iuso nyaka loo ni ithiedho jatuo to ngimame medo mana bedo marach.Giko to kwingli!! Gima kare en ni dher ariemba inyiedho to/ka ing’iyo oko…nikech wuongi kadek pore apoya ma ipuk chak tendeng’!

LIT TO OK CHWER REMO
Kenya piny matin kendo manyako ma silili wito kachuoge motegno.Yawuot Ramogi maroteke dhiyo e bwo lowo rumo.Olembe mabeyo yamo turo;yiende motegno tur rumo.Ayaki rego ka poda,wabiro tuombo kanye?Dere mukore rumo,wabiro keno kamanade?Solro ma pilepile oromowa;kunyo pilepile oolowa.Kata ket mana kunyri kendi nikech joasungu ne owacho ni we should let the dead bury themselves.Saruru tieko ni ogik! Opao olo lowo ni chuth!…ayaki ni kodwa,wan bende wan kode.Ngimani en mari mondo irite!!!!!

Sembe im dak tinde pim gi nyamin?…makata ndalogi ka igloo kodhi; ochuti gi andiwa tinde owe ikomo serena gi seredo.Kata kar kunyo sirni funde kunyo foundation;kata ka ng’ato goyo dala to iting’o tado? Igedo kod kite….lokruok onego obedie, yawa!!! Yawa!!…there should be change!!!!!!Kaluwore gi kit piny,tero anyora tieko miere;tho mana ka apaka ma luwo bang’ apaka wadgi,jomatindo ne luwo bang’ joma oti.Ma manade ma nyithindo dhi rumoni?Jowadwa,winjo wach loyo bor im gi mit!!

LIT TO OK CHWER REMO
Rem malietni wagolo kune? Nyuanndruok makama ni oa kanye?Chakre kar ang’o ma ojende odonje terruok anyora kama!? Chakre kar ang’o ma mon odak makata chwo!? Chakre kar ang’o ma mine obet kod chuo e ute math!? BAYO ALANDA NOKEL AJIEMA ;BOLRUOK E AJUOGA MAR AJUOKE;ywak to ok yath!!!!!!!!

China: Drug ‘rehabilitation’ centers deny treatment, allow forced labour

Human Rights Watch Press release
January 6, 2010

(New York) – Chinese authorities are incarcerating drug users in compulsory drug detention centers that deny them access to treatment for drug dependency and put them at risk of physical abuse and unpaid forced labor, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today. Half a million people are confined within compulsory drug detention centers in China at any given time, according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

The 37-page report, “Where Darkness Knows No Limits,” based on research in Yunnan and Guangxi provinces, documents how China’s June 2008 Anti-Drug Law compounds the health risks of suspected illicit drug users by allowing government officials and security forces to incarcerate them for up to seven years. The incarceration is without trial or judicial oversight. The law fails to clearly define mechanisms for legal appeals or the reporting of abusive conduct, and does not ensure evidence-based drug dependency treatment.

“Instead of putting in place effective drug dependency treatment, the new Chinese law subjects suspected drug users to arbitrary detention and inhumane treatment,” said Joe Amon, the Health and Human Rights Division director at Human Rights Watch. “The Chinese government has explained the law as a progressive step towards recognizing drug users as ‘patients,’ but they’re not even being provided the rights of ordinary prisoners.”

The report documents how individuals detained in some drug detention centers are routinely beaten, denied medical treatment, and forced to work up to 18 hours a day without pay. Although sentenced to “rehabilitation,” they are denied access to effective drug dependency treatment and provided no opportunity to learn skills to reintegrate into the community.

Human Rights Watch said that over the past decade, the Chinese government has promoted progressive policies that embrace some harm reduction strategies as part of a pragmatic response to high rates of drug use and HIV/AIDS. Partnering with local and international nongovernmental organizations, the Chinese government has expanded community-based methadone therapy and piloted needle exchange programs in some areas with high HIV/AIDS rates. A statement released by the Office of China National Narcotics Control Commission in June 2008 declared that “drug treatment and rehabilitation is in accordance with human-centered principles.” In March 2009 a high-ranking government official stated, “The Chinese Government maintains that drug treatment and rehabilitation should proceed in a people-oriented way.”

However, Human Rights Watch said that in practice, the new law is compounding the health risks, social marginalization, and stigmatization of suspected drug users.

Although the implementation of the Anti-Drug Law ended the practice of sentencing suspected drug users to Re-Education Through Labor (RTL), the Anti-Drug Law expands the sentence in a compulsory drug detention center to a minimum of two years, up from the previously mandated six to twelve month sentence. These drug detention centers permit the same abuses of unpaid forced labor, physical abuse, and the denial of basic health care common under the RTL system.

Abuses have led to the death of detainees in some cases, according to former detainees interviewed by Human Rights Watch. The law also adds an undefined “community-based rehabilitation” period of up to four years, effectively permitting incarceration without trial for up to seven years.

“The Chinese government should stop these abuses and ensure that the rights of suspected drug users are fully respected,” said Amon. “Addressing illicit drug use requires developing voluntary, community-based, outpatient treatment based upon effective, proven approaches to drug addiction. Warehousing large numbers of drug users and subjecting them to forced labor and physical abuse is not ‘rehabilitation.'”

Accounts from former detainees of China’s drug detention centers in Yunnan, 2009:

“I was leaving work when I was ambushed by several plainclothes police. They started beating me and put handcuffs on me. No one on the street tried to help because they just assumed I was a criminal. The police said if I didn’t give them 3,000 RMB [US$440] they would put me in a drug detention center. They brought me to my house and told me if I didn’t get the money they would keep beating me. They waited while I was inside and waited while my family found 3,000 RMB from relatives.”

“When we are on the street, in a restaurant, anywhere, the police can just grab us and make us do a urine test. Whenever we use the national identity card they can make us do a urine test.”

“The police stopped me and they wanted money. I said, ‘Please don’t use violence. Please don’t use violence.’ But they beat me.”

“I am a former drug addict. I started using in 1990. I’ve tried to get clean and have been in compulsory labor camps more than eight times. I just cannot go back to a forced labor camp – a terrifying world where darkness knows no limits.”