All About Africa: More Information With less Digging

Key geographic and census information on Africa

 African countries and their capitals, geography and population statistics. Data is accurate as of September 2010.

African countries are classified according to geography, language or colonial history.

Name of region[87] and
territory, with
flag 
Area
(km²)
Population
(2009 est)
except where noted 
Density
(per km²)
Capital
Eastern Africa: 6,384,904 316,053,651 49.5  
Burundi 27,830 8,988,091[88] 322.9 Bujumbura
Comoros 2,170 752,438[88] 346.7 Moroni
Djibouti 23,000 516,055[88] 22.4 Djibouti
Eritrea 121,320 5,647,168[88] 46.5 Asmara
Ethiopia 1,127,127 85,237,338[88] 75.6 Addis Ababa
Kenya 582,650 39,002,772[88] 66.0 Nairobi
Madagascar 587,040 20,653,556[88] 35.1 Antananarivo
Malawi 118,480 14,268,711[88] 120.4 Lilongwe
Mauritius 2,040 1,284,264[88] 629.5 Port Louis
Mayotte (France) 374 223,765[88] 489.7 Mamoudzou
Mozambique 801,590 21,669,278[88] 27.0 Maputo
Réunion (France) 2,512 743,981(2002) 296.2 Saint-Denis
Rwanda 26,338 10,473,282[88] 397.6 Kigali
Seychelles 455 87,476[88] 192.2 Victoria
Somalia 637,657 9,832,017[88] 15.4 Mogadishu
Tanzania 945,087 41,048,532[88] 43.3 Dodoma
Uganda 236,040 32,369,558[88] 137.1 Kampala
Zambia 752,614 11,862,740[88] 15.7 Lusaka
Middle Africa: 6,613,253 121,585,754 18.4  
Angola 1,246,700 12,799,293[88] 10.3 Luanda
Cameroon 475,440 18,879,301[88] 39.7 Yaoundé
Central African Republic 622,984 4,511,488[88] 7.2 Bangui
Chad 1,284,000 10,329,208[88] 8.0 N’Djamena
Congo 342,000 4,012,809[88] 11.7 Brazzaville
Democratic Republic of the Congo 2,345,410 68,692,542[88] 29.2 Kinshasa
Equatorial Guinea 28,051 633,441[88] 22.6 Malabo
Gabon 267,667 1,514,993[88] 5.6 Libreville
São Tomé and Príncipe 1,001 212,679[88] 212.4 São Tomé
Northern Africa: 8,533,021 211,087,622 24.7  
Algeria 2,381,740 34,178,188[88] 14.3 Algiers
Egypt[89] 1,001,450 83,082,869[88] total, Asia 1.4m 82.9 Cairo
Libya 1,759,540 6,310,434[88] 3.6 Tripoli
Morocco 446,550 34,859,364[88] 78.0 Rabat
Sudan 2,505,810 41,087,825[88] 16.4 Khartoum
Tunisia 163,610 10,486,339[88] 64.1 Tunis
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic[90] 266,000 405,210[88] 1.5 El Aaiún
Spanish and Portuguese territories in Northern Africa:
Canary Islands (Spain)[91] 7,492 1,694,477(2001) 226.2 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,
Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Ceuta (Spain)[92] 20 71,505(2001) 3,575.2
Madeira Islands (Portugal)[93] 797 245,000(2001) 307.4 Funchal
Melilla (Spain)[94] 12 66,411(2001) 5,534.2
Southern Africa: 2,693,418 56,406,762 20.9  
Botswana 600,370 1,990,876[88] 3.3 Gaborone
Lesotho 30,355 2,130,819[88] 70.2 Maseru
Zimbabwe 390,580 11,392,629[88] 29.1 Harare
Namibia 825,418 2,108,665[88] 2.6 Windhoek
South Africa 1,219,912 49,052,489[88] 40.2 Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Pretoria[95]
Swaziland 17,363 1,123,913[88] 64.7 Mbabane
Western Africa: 6,144,013 296,186,492 48.2  
Benin 112,620 8,791,832[88] 78.0 Porto-Novo
Burkina Faso 274,200 15,746,232[88] 57.4 Ouagadougou
Cape Verde 4,033 429,474[88] 107.3 Praia
Côte d’Ivoire 322,460 20,617,068[88] 63.9 Abidjan,[96] Yamoussoukro
Gambia 11,300 1,782,893[88] 157.7 Banjul
Ghana 239,460 23,832,495[88] 99.5 Accra
Guinea 245,857 10,057,975[88] 40.9 Conakry
Guinea-Bissau 36,120 1,533,964[88] 42.5 Bissau
Liberia 111,370 3,441,790[88] 30.9 Monrovia
Mali 1,240,000 12,666,987[88] 10.2 Bamako
Mauritania 1,030,700 3,129,486[88] 3.0 Nouakchott
Niger 1,267,000 15,306,252[88] 12.1 Niamey
Nigeria 923,768 158,259,000[88] 161.5 Abuja
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (UK) 410 7,637[88] 14.4 Jamestown
Senegal 196,190 13,711,597[88] 69.9 Dakar
Sierra Leone 71,740 6,440,053[88] 89.9 Freetown
Togo 56,785 6,019,877[88] 106.0 Lomé
Africa Total 30,368,609 1,001,320,281 33.0  

 

 

Ghana: Give the bling to the living, not the dead. By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong

mourners at a funeral in Ghana
mourners at a funeral in Ghana

It is a tough area that borders on traditional cosmology. The aim of the enlightenment thinkers is to debunk the misinterpretation of traditional cosmology, especially in the southern parts of Ghana, where millions of dollars are spent on the dead while the majority languish in poverty.

While the traditional funeral is a ceremony for celebrating, consecrating, or remembering the life of a deceased person, in today’s Ghana the simplicity of the celebration has been turned upside down and it has become a showbiz event.

The essence of a traditional Ghanaian funeral combines a complex set of beliefs and practices to remember the dead. It includes the entombment itself and various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in the dead’s honour. This has given way to bling.

One of the criticisms against excessive spending on funerals is that it leaves some families debt-ridden and poorer as they try to out-bling others. Another is that the spending takes place within an atmosphere of poverty where proper eating, good sanitation, suitable and more schools, water, rigorous healthcare systems, and generally more durable socio-economic infrastructure are desperately needed.

For instance, a proper modern toilet facility anywhere in Ghana could be built with GH¢ 7,500 (around US$6,919). The amount is the minimum cost of a funeral for an ordinary Ghanaian (Yes, I know this amount is too much to build a toilet but let’s put it that way as per helping the living to live better and still have a simple funeral ceremony at the same time).

Charles Palmer-Buckle, the Archbishop of Accra Catholic Diocese, has thundered that too much money is spent on the dead and funerals that ‘deprive descendants of the deceased the badly needed resources they need…a funeral for an ordinary Ghanaian now costs a minimum of GH¢ 7,500 (around US$6,919)…it is ridiculous to spend such an amount to “celebrate” a deceased person, who left behind a number of children who are yet to find their feet in life.’

Parallels can be drawn between Palmer-Buckle’s deliberations about Ghanaians’ wasteful expenditure on the dead and Pericles’ ‘Funeral Oration’. As Thucydides, the Greek thinker, recorded in book two of his ‘History of the Peloponnesian War’, it was established Athenian practice in the late 5th century to hold a public funeral in honour of the dead in war.

With the remains of the dead left out for three days in a tent and offerings made for the dead, a funeral procession was held and burial undertaken. The last part of the funeral ceremony was a speech delivered by a prominent Athenian citizen. Pericles was picked to give the oration. In the ‘Funeral Oration’, as inscribed by Thucydides, Pericles did praise the dead, but intentionally gave much more praise to Athens’ achievements – which was ‘designed to stir the spirits of a state still at war’.

There is no war in Ghana, but there is a war to be fought on the socio-economic front against poverty and certain erroneous cultural believes that inhibit progress. And that needs Ghanaians to refine the cultural inhibitions that hinder their progress so they can be free to live a better life. Yes, the dead should be praised, as African tradition dictates, but Palmer-Buckle moves beyond that, and proclaims that though the dead should be honoured, the living, too, should be fully taken care of.

Palmer-Buckle takes a look at the abysmal poverty of most Ghanaians and pronounces that the original traditions of funeral ceremonies have now become a competing theatre of ostentation to the detriment of the living. Palmer-Buckle, therefore, punches the ‘lavish spending on funerals’ as ‘an invention of the present generation and never a part of the cherished Ghanaian traditions’.

At issue isn’t the dead itself, or any trouble with traditional cosmology, but how the escalating expenditure on the dead today, against 100 years ago, negatively impacts on the growing population. Most Ghanaians live below the poverty line (around US$1 a day, according to the UN). There is no dilemma between the physical and the metaphysical. The battle of the enlightenment thinkers, as Palmer-Buckle echoes, is to re-wire Ghanaians to go back to their traditional roots where funeral ceremonies were simple, non-ostentatious, and very traditional.

Ghanaians appear entrapped in the brazenness of the funerals, making the funeral business glitzy. One of the leading funeral services proprietors in Ghana, if not the number one, is my junior brother. He is called Kweku Akosah and his funeral business is called Owners Funeral Services. Though based in Kumasi, Ghana’s second largest city, over the years Owners Funeral Services, driven by the sheer obsession with the dead and funerals, has grown so much that it has branches in most parts of Ghana.

Akosah employs over 100 people – wailers and criers, dancers, praise-singers, decorators of the dead, coffin makers, musicians, tailors and seamstresses, promoters, food makers, and servers. As Akosah’s funeral business becomes increasingly sophisticated, he finances certain funerals against the backdrops of agreements of sharing profits with the deceased families. Akosah is on the verge of building a state-of-the-art mortuary in Kumasi.

Such highlights are cast against the unrelenting poverty of Ghanaians. Palmer-Buckle’s funeral oration is ‘designed to stir the spirits’ of the living Ghanaian by making the case that part of the huge sums of money spent on the dead could be appropriated for the living so as to make life comfortable.

Still, Palmer-Buckle and the enlightenment stance is a difficult position because it is misunderstood by many Ghanaian traditionalists as impinging on the sacred area of Ghanaians’ cosmology. But at issue isn’t the cosmology, but the living in terms of better food, shelter, education, water, sanitation, health, roads, and the other comforts of life.

Palmer-Buckle bravely looks more at the living than the dead, and how the living should live better before he/she dies. ‘Instead of spending hugely on the dead, Ghanaians must rather establish an endowment fund in memory of the deceased, which would be used to sponsor education of their relatives to realise their full potential…children would largely remember their great grandfather in whose memory a fund was established to sponsor their education as against their relatives on who much money was spent to bury them and left behind debts.’

In Archbishop Palmer-Buckle’s ‘Funeral Oration’ Ghanaian enlightenment thinkers are wrestling with certain inhibitions within the Ghanaian/African culture that is hampering their progress. And that will need more fearless thinking than they have thought of. And that may need some remarkable tinkering with certain aspects of Ghanaians’ traditional cosmology.

* Kofi Akosah-Sarpong is a journalist and academic.

Ethiopia: Feed them and bleed them

"Western donors continue to hand out billions of dollars in ‘humanitarian’ and ‘economic’ aid to Ethiopia’s Zenawi regime each year, turning a blind eye to the fact that their handouts are propping up a repressive dictatorship" The helping hand that feeds Ethiopians is the same hand that helps bleed Ethiopia. Every year, the US, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Canada, Japan and other Western countries hand out billions of dollars in ‘humanitarian’ and ‘economic’ aid to the regime of dictator-in-chief Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia. Every year, these donors turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to the notorious fact that their handouts are used to prop up and fortify a repressive one-man, one-party totalitarian dictatorship. Today, Western donors have collectively embraced the proverbial principle to ‘see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil’ of what their ‘aid’ money is doing in Ethiopia. Last week, Human Rights Watch (HRW) pried open Western donors' eyes to see the havoc their aid money is wreaking in Ethiopia and unplugged their ears to hear the truth about the evil they are helping to spread throughout that poor country. In a report entitled, Development Without Freedom [1], HRW sketched out the architecture of a vast kleptocracy (government of thieves) whose lifeblood is continuous and massive infusion of foreign aid. The report represents a devastating indictment of Western donors and their client regime for crimes that, if committed in the donor countries, would constitute Class A felonies: ‘Led by the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the government has used donor-supported programs, salaries, and training opportunities as political weapons to control the population, punish dissent, and undermine political opponents–both real and perceived. Local officials deny these people access to seeds and fertilizer, agricultural land, credit, food aid, and other resources for development. Such politicization has a direct impact on the livelihoods of people for whom access to agricultural inputs is a matter of survival. It also contributes to a broader climate of fear, sending a potent message that basic survival depends on political loyalty to the state and the ruling party.’ HRW charges that Zenawi's regime has used Western aid to benefit its supporters by giving them special access to micro-credit (small loans designed for poor households) loans and benefits under the productive safety net program (multi-year cash payments to those vulnerable to famine to avoid disaster from food shortage emergencies). The regime has misused state educational facilities for political purposes and engaged in systematic political indoctrination of students, repression of teachers and purging of individuals who are unwilling to support the ruling party from their jobs. In sum, after 19 years and ‘investing’ US$26 billion in ‘aid’, the crowning achievement of Western aid in Ethiopia is the establishment and entrenchment of a one-man, one-party totalitarian state! The Western donors refuse to accept any responsibility for the misuse and abuse of their aid money in Ethiopia; and the conspiracy of silence to cover up the ugly facts uncovered by HRW continues. A few days after HRW released its report, a gathering of vulturous poverty pimps known as the Development Assistance Group (DAG) representing donor states issued a statement denying the undeniable. ‘We do not concur with the conclusions of the recent HRW report regarding widespread, systematic abuse of development aid in Ethiopia. Our study did not generate any evidence of systematic or widespread distortion.’ [2] DAG co-chair Samuel Nyambi was manifestly dismissive of HRW's findings when he arrogantly proclaimed that ‘development partners have built into the programmes they support monitoring and safeguard mechanisms that give a reasonable assurance that resources are being used for their intended purposes.’ In DAG-istan, what HRW found and reported simply could not happen. HRW made it all up! The report is all lies and fabrications! The fact of the matter is that it is in DAG's self-interest to bury the truth and keep covering it up even when the truth it is exhumed for public display. For DAG to acknowledge any part of the HRW evidence is tantamount to self-incrimination. They could never admit that the things HRW reported occurred under their watch. As the HRW reports demonstrates, DAG and the donor countries ‘have done little to address the problem [aid abuse/misuse] or tackle their own role in underwriting government repression… even though they recognize [civil and political rights] to be central to sustainable socioeconomic development.’ Huddled together in DAG-istan, the poverty pimps have collectively resolved to continue to do their usual aid business in Ethiopia because ‘broad economic progress outweighs individual political freedoms’. In ‘their eagerness to show progress in Ethiopia, aid officials are shutting their eyes to the repression lurking behind the official statistics.’ They say ‘their programs are working well and that aid was not being 'distorted.' They refuse to carry ‘out credible, independent investigations into the problem.’ The ‘donor country legislatures and audit institutions [have failed] to examine development aid to Ethiopia to ensure that it is not supporting political repression.’ They refuse to ‘wake up to the fact that some of their aid is contributing to human rights abuses’ in Ethiopia. The Western donors have ignored calls to ‘seriously weigh the impact that their funding has on bolstering repressive structures and practices in Ethiopia.’ They are unwilling to do a ‘fundamental re-thinking of their strategy.’

Ghana Hit by World Cup bonus row

By Michael Oti Adjei
BBC Sport, Accra

Ghana’s achievement in reaching the World Cup quarter-finals has been soured by a row over bonuses.

None of the players has received the $63,000 promised to each member of the Black Stars because of a procedural dispute with the Bank of Ghana.

The Black Stars danced their way to the quarter-finals in South Africa
The Black Stars danced their way to the quarter-finals in South Africa

The central bank is insisting on paying the players by depositing money in their individual accounts.

But the players are up in arms because they want to be paid directly in cash as has happened in the past.

“The Bank states it serves customers in accordance with the Bank’s operational guidelines and that it is against prudent operational practice to make payments to individuals in excess of $10,000 (ten thousand dollars) in over-the-counter transactions,” the Bank of Ghana said in a statement.

The statement went on: “Accordingly, the Bank has informed the Ministry of Youth and Sports that the Bank would pay the foreign exchange amounts in question either to the bank accounts of the Black Stars players, or by cheques drawn on the Bank’s external account.

“This is in line with international best practice and with various security considerations.

“The Bank has therefore requested the Ministry to furnish it with a list of the names of the players and the respective amounts to each player to enable it to make the payments.

“The Bank is still expecting a response from the Ministry.”

The central bank was forced to issue the statement after accusations last week that it was responsible for the delay in the payment of the players bonuses.

The bonus row overshadowed Ghana’s last African Cup of Nations qualifier against Sudan.

A deadline of 15 October set by deputy Sports Minister Nii Nortey Duah passed without a single penny being paid out to anyone.

Eradicating malaria? Not anytime soon.

Eradication vs controlling of malaria map

[ad#GBAF-1-text]
In a series of articles published in the Lancet, international team of researchers suggests that efforts to eradicate malaria in some countries may be counter-productive. They believe that a policy of eradication in some areas could lead to unintended consequences such as swings in funding and political commitment elsewhere. Specifically, they suggest that most sub-Saharan African countries are better off pursuing a policy of shrinking the areas affected by malaria than one focused on eradication.

Eradication vs controlling of malaria map
Eradication vs controlling of malaria map

It is not a closed case for sub-Saharan African though. The researches state that

“When confronting malaria, elimination is worthy, challenging, and just possible, but it must be pursued with balance, humility, and rigorous analysis. Malaria will only be truly eliminable (or eradicable) when an effective vaccine is available.”

Do we really have to just accept the conclusion from these researchers?  As a scientist myself, I believe we have to separate policy descriptions from scientific possibilities. I’ll be responding fully to these papers in the next few days.
[ad#GBAF-1-text]

The Danger of a Single Side Story, by Chimamanda Adichie

Our lives, our cultures, are composed of many overlapping stories. Novelist Chimamanda Adichie tells the story of how she found her authentic cultural voice — and warns that if we hear only a single story about another person or country, we risk a critical misunderstanding.

Why you should listen to her:

In Nigeria, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel Half of a Yellow Sun has helped inspire new, cross-generational communication about the Biafran war. In this and in her other works, she seeks to instill dignity into the finest details of each character, whether poor, middle class or rich, exposing along the way the deep scars of colonialism in the African landscape.

Adichie’s newest book, The Thing Around Your Neck, is a brilliant collection of stories about Nigerians struggling to cope with a corrupted context in their home country, and about the Nigerian immigrant experience.

Adichie builds on the literary tradition of Igbo literary giant Chinua Achebe—and when she found out that Achebe liked Half of a Yellow Sun, she says she cried for a whole day. What he said about her rings true: “We do not usually associate wisdom with beginners, but here is a new writer endowed with the gift of ancient storytellers.”

“When she turned 10 and read Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, about the clash between Igbo tradition and the British colonial way of life, everything changed: ‘I realized that people who looked like me could live in books.’ She has been writing about Africa ever since.” Washington Post

[youtube]D9Ihs241zeg[/youtube]

TED TALK

Entertainment

Zimbabwe's big Brother loser or winner?
Zimbabwe's big Brother loser or winner?

Mugabe hijacks Big Brother craze for political gain

Zimbabwe’s representative in Africa’s Big Brother reality TV show landed in second place, but took home a prize bigger than the official jackpot, a date from President Robert Mugabe’s family. Reports from Harare say the Zimbabwean loser was whisked away to State House to meet Mugabe immidiately he landed.

Uti Nwachukwu from Nigeria won the official 200,000-dollar prize from the show. The Big Brother reality show locks up contestants from around the continent in a house.

Munyaradzi Chidzonga just lost out to Uti received a 300,000-dollar cheque from President Robert Mugabe on Wednesday, $100, 000 more than the winner.

Mugabe, who probably did not watch the show, also declared the voting as ‘not free and fair’. Really?

Teachers and nurses are on strike every other week in Zimbabwe so one wonders whether this is not a misplaced priority.

Naomi Campbell’s Blood Diamon Tantrum

Naomi Campbell and Charles Taylor, the former Liberian Tyrant

During an interview with ABC news, Naomi Campbell was asked if the large diamond she had on was a Blood Diamond. Ms. Campbell, as expected, attacked the camera, slapping it out of the hands of the cameraman.

Naomi Campbell, the model

Even though Naomi is well known for her violent temper than her modeling talents, this time I guess she was right. Coincidentally, Ms. Campbell and Mia Farrow were in Africa raising money for relief in Haiti . On this, I’m on the side of Naomi, at least for once.

Charles Taylor, the former tyrant of Liberia is being investigated for genocide.

Naomi has been in African news for a while. When are we going to find out if she really got the diamond from Mr. Taylor?

Watch the interview here

Akosua Agyepong, known as Ghana’s Janet Jackson

Akusua Agyepong, a.k.a Janet Jackson in Ghana
Akusua Agyepong, a.k.a Janet Jackson in Ghana

Who is Ghana’s Janet jackson? in skill and in looks? Even a child on the streets at Adum, Kumasi, will tell you its Akosua Agyepong.

Akosua Agyepong was born in Accra. She is a half Ashanti and half Akyem. She started her education at Harrow International School and later attended Holy Child Secondary in Cape Coast.

Akosua started composing songs as a child indicating that, music was an inborn passion for her. She was subsequently discovered by legendary Nana Kwame Ampadu and subsequently came out with her first album ‘Frema’ which was released on January 1, 1990. The ‘Frema’ album had songs like ‘Me ye Obaa’, ‘Born again’, ‘Anan tuo’, ‘San be hwe wo mba’ among others.

Her second album was entitled ‘Esiwa’ had the hit song like ‘Kokokoo’. Her third was with music group NAKOREX which was made up of herself, Nat Brew and Rex Omar. She later turned into doing gospel music.
[youtube]0x_cgXrtdSo[/youtube]

Akosua is married to Rev Daniel Asamoah-Larbi. She is a mother of six (can’t believe that!), . She also an entrepreneur and owns a restaurant, ‘Ye Kum Kom’ at Rawlings Park in Accra Central.

WWJD (What will Jesus Do?) A Nigerian student is rewarded for his honesty

Durojaiye Adeyemi Job, a 30-year-old level 100 Higher National Diploma (HND) engineering student of The Polytechnic, Ibadan, Oyo State, found a whooping N9.3 billion in his Savings Account domiciled at the institution’s First Bank plc branch.

But rather than touch the money, in a rare display of honesty, he alerted the bank’s authority, won himself a scholarship, and was hosted to a reception at the Lagos headquarters of his church, Mountain of Fire and Miracles by the Overseer Dr. D.k. Olukoya,

Adeyemi explains exactly how the error happened.. “It all happened on Friday August 13, 2010. I was going back home for the weekend and decided to cash N2, 000 from my acct, out of the N3, 000 that I had there. I inserted my ATM card, the machine dispensed N2, 000. I re-entered my password to check my balance and saw a balance of N9.3 billion! I was surprised. To verify what I saw there, I had to re-insert the ATM card to withdraw N20, 000. An amount which was more than what I had there. To my utmost surprised, the machine dispensed the money. That shows that the money is real. I printed out the receipt and went home because the bank had already closed then. I kept the N20, 000 with me and on Monday Morning, I went to see the bank manager and narrated the whole story to her and returned the N20, 000.

First Bank explains error: It was a computer malfunctioning that enabled Mr. Adeyemi’s ATM Card access funds in one of the Bank’s internal accounts. This glitch was rectified within a few minutes. During that period, Mr Adeyemi was able to withdraw N20, 000 which is the maximum amount with-drawable for a single transaction. We all know that computers do malfunction. Stories of this nature abound globally. However First Bank has a very robust security measure in place that ensures security of our customer’s data and their funds.

The General Overseer of the Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries, MFM, Dr. Daniel Olukoya, has presented a brand new Toyota Corolla car, an undisclosed amount of money and a certificate of honesty to the Polytechnic student, Durojaye Adeyemi for his honesty

Nigerian student rewarded for his honesty
Nigerian student rewarded for his honesty

Dr. D.K. Olukoya said the church decided to reward him to show people that intergrity and honest still pay. He noted that Adeyemi’s action has portrayed him as a good ambassador of the church’s emphasis on holiness.

Source: http://nigeriafilms.com/news

Mass circumcision in South African Prisions

South African prison ask to be circumcised

An incredible number of prisoners in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province are calling upon the authorities to circumcise them to help combat the spread of HIV. Health authorities say they have had more people wanting to be circumcised than their resources can manage and are overwhelmed.

World Health Organization (WHO) studies show compelling evidence that male circumcision reduces the risk of heterosexually acquired HIV infection in men by approximately 60% and recommends that male circumcision should be considered an efficacious intervention for HIV prevention in countries and regions with heterosexual epidemics, high HIV and low male circumcision prevalence. Believe in circumcision varies widely in Sub-Saharan Africa as we reported here a couple of weeks ago. KwaZulu-Natal has one of the highest HIV infection rates in South Africa and the voluntary call by the prisoners to receive the service is an indication of the magnitude of the problem and also an encouraging sign that education makes an impact. Male circumcision provides only partial protection, and therefore should be only one element of a comprehensive HIV prevention package. Some figures on HIV in South Africa Number of people with HIV: 5.7 million Prevalence, ages 15 to 49: 18% Patients receiving anti-retroviral drugs: 460,000 (estimated in 2008) Deaths due to Aids: 350,000 (estimated in 2007) Number of Aids orphans: 1.4 million Source: UNAids/WHO/Unicef epidemiological fact sheet, 2008