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IFP: Buthelezi: Address by the IFP president, in support of World Aids Day, Vryheid (01/12/2010)

1st December 2010

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Date: 01/12/2010
Source: The Inkatha Freedom Party
Title: IFP: Buthelezi: Address by the IFP president, in support of World Aids Day, Vryheid

 

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In the last century, between 1914 and 1918, the world engaged the War
to End All Wars which has become known as World War I. Soldiers from
across Europe, Asia, the United States, the Russian Empire, Australia
and Africa entered into combat. They came from the French colonies of
Algeria, Cote d'Ivoire, Madagascar and Morocco. They came from
Namibia, Poland, Japan and Ghana, from Yugoslavia, Ireland and
Portugal. It was a global war that lasted four years. By the end of
it, the death toll through combat, disease and starvation, among
soldiers, civilians and prisoners of war, had reached 16.5 million.

Today, in Sub-Saharan Africa alone, 22.4 million people are living
with HIV/Aids. The figures around this disease are staggering. It is
difficult for us to comprehend the impact HIV/Aids has had since it
first emerged in the eighties. In Sub-Saharan Africa, where Aids is
more prevalent than anywhere else in the world, more than 14 million
children have lost one or both of their parents to this disease. South
Africa has the highest incidence of infection throughout the world,
and KwaZulu Natal bears the heaviest burden of all.

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I therefore feel the weight of responsibility as I rise to speak in
Vryheid on World Aids Day. Although we have been living with the
reality of HIV/Aids for more than three decades, there is still a
sense of urgency about getting the message across that we can beat
this disease; we can turn the tide that is threatening to crush us.
The world has marked Aids Day since 1988, but we have only been
speaking openly about this disease in our own country for about a
decade. And there is still far too much myth and superstition, too
much discrimination and silence, too much shame and hopelessness.

Like so many families in KwaZulu Natal, I have walked a personal
journey with this disease and seen it strike my family. My wife and I
have buried two of our children who succumbed to Aids after a long
battle with HIV. On the 24th of April 2004, my son, Prince Nelisuzulu
Benedict, died at the King George V Hospital in Durban. Just a few
months later, on the 5th of August, we faced the death of my daughter,
Princess Mandisi Sibukakonke. Both were cut down in the prime of their
lives. Both were buried amidst tears and suffering.

When I buried my children, I made the decision not to hide the cause
of their death as it had become customary to do. I felt that we needed
to become open with one another about this disease, so that we could
expose it to the light of truth. In this way, I hoped, we might save
lives and return hope to the many who were facing the lonely journey
through HIV/Aids. I therefore spoke publically about the battle our
family had endured and unashamedly announced that my son and my
daughter had lost the battle to Aids.

I am of a generation and a culture that does not speak openly about
sex. Many would say that my leadership position makes it inappropriate
for me to address matters of this nature in public, let alone speak to
the media about it. But I know that we are facing a war; in some ways
a war more devastating than any war we have fought on our own soil or
anywhere else in the world. And when we face a war of this magnitude,
the niceties of polite conversation fall away and the burden of
speaking openly is placed squarely on our shoulders.

Shortly after my son died in 2004, former President Nelson Mandela
lost a grandson to HIV/Aids. I was gratified when he too stood up and
spoke about it openly. The walls of silence were finally being
penetrated and people had started speaking about what caused Aids, how
to prevent HIV transmission, where to get tested, how to live more
responsibly and what to do for the millions of people already
suffering from this disease. Information proved to be the tool that
slowed the terrible onslaught of infection. Today, the epidemic
appears to have stabilized after years of skyrocketing upwards. But
there are still many infections every day, and still many families
struggling with HIV/Aids.

I speak of families struggling with this disease because, even though
HIV is transmitted from one individual to another, its impact is felt
by everyone around the carrier. HIV positive status means you need to
change your lifestyle. You need to eat healthier, exercise and rest,
and be sure to use condoms, stay faithful and be honest with your
partner. But it also means needing a support structure of family,
friends, healthcare providers and community organizations. It means
relying on people to take care of you when you are sick, relying on
state funds for treatment, relying on colleagues to carry your work
when you are off sick, relying on relatives to provide for you,
relying on nurses to visit you, relying on the church to support you
and relying on others to take care of your children as Aids takes its
toll. Everyone feels the impact.

It is devastating to lose a partner or parent, a child or friend to a
disease which is preventable. I know we could have done more in South
Africa to slow this disease and turn the tide of infection. We could
have saved lives. But our Government was slow to react to the pandemic
and, when it did, it first moved through the painful stages of denial,
uncertainty and procrastination before agreeing that this was a war we
would have to engage with boldness. Other countries, which moved more
quickly to this stage of willingness to act, stopped infection rates
and even began to reverse them.

The prime example, of course, is Uganda, where the HIV/Aids pandemic
was reduced from 30% prevalence to just 5% under the leadership of
President Yoweri Museveni. Uganda did not have the resources which are
available to South Africa, yet they have a success story. In July of
2003, I had the privilege of attending the South African Christian
Leadership Assembly which was addressed by the First Lady of Uganda,
Mrs Janet Museveni. She told us that the Ugandan people have fought
the pandemic by returning to some of the indigenous mores of the
Ugandan people, as well as following the teachings of the Church on
the importance of chastity before marriage.

She quoted a speech that her husband, President Yoweri Museveni,
delivered in Italy in 1998, in which he stated that if the only thing
that could save Uganda from the pandemic of HIV/Aids is just a piece
of rubber, referring to condoms, then we are already doomed. He knew
that there had to be more. There had to be a personal commitment,
launched on a national scale, that could bring about the moral
regeneration of a nation.

South Africa also launched a campaign of moral regeneration and
positioned it under the leadership of our Deputy President at the
time, Mr Jacob Zuma. This is not the time for recriminations. But
history will record President Zuma's poor judgement when he uttered
before a court that he had showered after unprotected sex with an HIV
positive woman who was not his wife, in the hope that he would not be
infected. History also records the wavering of former President Mbeki
over whether HIV really causes Aids, and the ill-placed emphasis of
the late Minister of Health, Dr Tshabala-Msimang, on treating HIV/Aids
with garlic and African potatoes. History will even remember the bleak
moment when Government stapled condoms onto information leaflets,
rendering them useless.

I have found myself frustrated time and again with the poor leadership
decisions of our Government when it comes to fighting HIV/Aids. I have
tried to provide my own leadership to win this battle, both as a
traditional leader and as the President of the IFP. When the IFP was
at the helm of the province of KwaZulu Natal, our Premier, Dr LPHM
Mtshali, drove the initiative to provide anti-retroviral treatment to
all expectant women in this province, in opposition to the will of the
central Government.

It had been proven that a simple dose of Nevirapine could prevent HIV
transmission from mother to baby at birth, and we sought to offer
Nevirapine in every hospital and clinic in order to save lives. And we
did save lives. Thousands of children are alive and healthy today
because of that intervention. But when we challenged the national
Government to do the same for women across South Africa, they said it
could not be done. We took them to court, together with the Treatment
Action Campaign, to force them to do what any government should be
duty-bound to do.

The IFP had solicited a commitment from the international
pharmaceutical company, Boehringer-Ingelheim, to provide Nevirapine
for free for five years. We could not understand why Government
refused to act with the sense of urgency that this pandemic demanded.
It had already been several years since Amakhosi of this Kingdom met
in Ulundi to establish Task Teams of Amakhosi to address the pandemic
of HIV/AIDS. We, as traditional leaders, knew that we had to act. We
re-emphasised the Zulu custom of virginity testing and urged indunas
and amakhosi to encourage respect for young women before marriage.

Traditional leaders have been sidelined by Government. Our role,
powers and functions have been all but obliterated, in the face of
endless promises that the institution of Ubukhosi would be
accommodated in a democratic South Africa. Yet, in many ways, we have
done more to halt the spread of HIV than some leaders in Government. I
must commend our King as a champion in this battle. His Majesty the
King of the Zulu Nation had the foresight to bring back several of our
ancient customs to promote respect for women and encourage sexual
purity.

The year my children died, the Government of the United Kingdom
committed to spending one billion Pounds over three years on
Aids-related work for developing countries. Even now, 95% of people
living with HIV/Aids are in developing nations. The world has placed
great emphasis on the need to take bold action as we fight HIV/Aids.

In 2005, I visited Chatham House in London and spoke to the assembly
on breaking down the walls of silence and stigma surrounding HIV/Aids
in South Africa. On that occasion I noted the prediction of scientists
that it would be a decade before the pandemic would reach a plateau
and the full impact of HIV/Aids would be felt. We are halfway there,
and already we feel the devastating impact of HIV/Aids in our economy,
on our social structure and on our social assistance infrastructure.

We should have a larger workforce in our country. We should have fewer
citizens dependent on social assistance. Our healthcare system should
be coping. Our children should be at school, rather than running their
households and providing for their younger siblings. I think we keep
missing the mark in our strategy of fighting this disease. I believe
the Love Life campaign glamorised sex for teenagers and sent a message
that all young people are doing it; it is expected and okay, and even
trendy. I also have difficulty with the idea of promoting being HIV
positive as belonging to some kind of elite club that one should be
proud to be part of.

There is a space between stigmatising Aids and glamorising Aids; and
in that space the people of goodwill need to work and talk and do
battle to stop a disease that is killing our people far faster than it
should. We need to promote the same message that turned Uganda into a
success story. We need to call our people back to morality and
personal responsibility. We need to promote the use of condoms,
together with the message that faithfulness to one partner is
critically important.
In a sense, I think we need to prepare people beforehand for what they
will experience in their journey with HIV/Aids. Let us not sugar-coat
anything, because this is a tough and bitter road to walk. Let's be
realistic about what our people are suffering and speak openly about
our experiences as we and the people we love fight the ravages of this
disease. Let us focus greater attention on food security and ensuring
that our people have balanced nutrition, to keep their bodies strong
and ward off opportunistic diseases.

People with HIV do not always die of Aids. More often they die of
related infections, like TB, because their bodies' immune system can
no longer fight these secondary infections. It is true that we are all
going to die. But it is wrong that any of us should die before our
time, or suffer unduly before we step into eternity. I wish, on this
occasion, to pay a special tribute to the grandmothers and children,
the social workers and healthcare workers, who are caring for people
as they succumb to HIV/Aids. I know this is a heartbreaking task, and
I commend you for giving so selflessly for the sake of others. May God
bless our caregivers, and open our eyes to the tragedy in our midst.

As we gather to mark World Aids Day, I wish to thank the Honourable
Mayor of Zululand for offering me the opportunity to speak once again
about HIV/Aids and our ongoing war against it. I have spoken in venues
throughout the world, to journalists, students, doctors and academics,
to leaders, Presidents and lawyers. My message on every occasion has
been the same; we need to act. We need to take bold and decisive
steps, for we are in a war that is likely to decimate our nation if we
fail to act.
By speaking out as I do, I am fighting this war. By taking care of
orphaned children within our families and communities, we are fighting
this war. By using a condom every time you have sex, you are fighting
this war. We need every South African to become an active soldier on
this battleground. And like the men in the trenches during World War
I, we need to pray to God that He might lead us and give us the
victory we so desperately need. Let us take responsibility.

I thank you.
 

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