HIV: When They Need it Most, Just Embrace, Do Not Reject

By K. Amponsah-Manager

In an earlier article, I told you a story with the title “I Was Shocked When I Was Told I Have HIV”. Please remember to read that if you missed it.

HIV and Stigma:

We have lived with HIV for nearly 30 years, ever since the illness first came to light in the early 1980s, but the cultural attitudes that drive most of the stereotypes do not seem to be going any where. Globally, it estimated that 7,400 people are infected every day with HIV, a significant proportion of this in Africa.

Stigmatization of HIV rooted in cultural and religious attitudes is perhaps sending as many people to their graves as the condition itself.

Stigmatization may be defined as severe social disapproval of personal characteristics or beliefs that are perceived to be against cultural norms. With regard to HIV stigma is portrayed in prejudice, negative attitudes, abuse and maltreatment directed at people living with HIV and AIDS. In some cases, people with HIV are ostracized by direct family members and the wider community. Even healthcare and education facilities may discriminate in offering service to such people.

Causes of HIV Stigma:

The causes for these established stigmas are widespread ranging from religious and cultural beliefs and expectations and mere misinformation. Personally, the first time I heard about HIV was around 1986 and it was in a church. The Ministry of Health had sent out a team of nurses and Para-medics to tour rural communities in Ghana to educate them on the newcomer HIV. In fact Churches and Mosques were the easiest and cheapest places to get the message across.  I was young then, but looking back I am embarrassed by how much misinformation we were fed. And I do not blame the messengers for what they told us. In fact, the world knew very little at that time. Since then much has been learnt about what is and what is not about HIV and AIDS. Some societies have moved quickly in using the available information to undo some of the damage done by the earlier misinformation; other societies are yet to begin the process. This is true of several African communities.

It is sad to say that some communities in Africa still hold the belief that shaking hands, drinking from a cup or eating from a bowl that has been used by a person with HIV, and in extreme cases using a chair previously used by an HIV carrier, will all result in contracting the virus. Again, HIV is normally associated with behaviors that are shunned by society. These include prostitution, drugs, homosexuality, and infidelity. In fact, in some communities, HIV, prostitution and promiscuity are synonyms. HIV was first identified in young gay men in New York and this is always used to tie the illness to the practice of homosexuality. When viewed from the religious perspective, the stigma is even justified since HIV is seen as a punishment for deviant behaviors.

Unfortunately, stigmatization hurts all of us: the patient, the family, and the community as a whole. Early detection is vital to managing the HIV condition but fear of stigmatization makes it difficult for people to go for check up and testing services even when there is reason to believe that something may not be right. The fear of stigmatization holds 1000s of people from accessing care even when it is available to them for free. A sizable proportion of our natural resources is spent in HIV treatment and campaign. We expect to move forward but stigmas and myths continue to be impediment.

The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon once said

“Stigma remains the single most important barrier to public action. It is a main reason why too many people are afraid to see a doctor to determine whether they have the disease, or to seek treatment if so. It helps make AIDS the silent killer, because people fear the social disgrace of speaking about it, or taking easily available precautions. Stigma is a chief reason why the AIDS epidemic continues to devastate societies around the world.” I couldn’t agree with him any more. 

HIV stigma is not a problem with developing nation alone. Even in a developed world such as the US, stigma associated with HIV prevails. HIV is a new disease compared to malaria, TB, and syphilis but at it is least 25 years old. It is about time that we work our way out of the stigmas associated with the condition and help ourselves, our families and society.

The person living with the HIV virus is a sister, brother, father, mother, teacher and an entertainer. He or she is not just the ‘HIV Patient’. What a different it would make if it was that easy to accept that.

Thanks for reading.

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Out of Zanzibar Comes the Magic Pill: Love in a Spice

Recently, I was doing a Google search for an Analytical Chemistry article on chromatographic separation when I came across one article that was about the separation of the constituents in nutmeg. One reference led me to the other until I finally stumbled upon one material that I found the most exciting. By this time I had accidentally left the chemistry journal website and browsing through diverse materials; some were good ones and some junk, such as, get one-month prescription of  this and that for free, pay only shipping, and things like that.

Let me give you a brief description of nutmeg before I uncover the strange discovery I stumbled upon.

Nutmeg is the dried kernel of the seeds of an evergreen tree with strong aroma and a (slightly) bitter taste. It was used in the preparations of various medicines in ancient times. Even today it is used widely in pharmaceutical preparations. The oil extracted from the herb is used in liniments, perfumes, hair lotions and as an antispasmodic. It has applications in managing digestive disorders, insomnia, dehydration, skin disorders and common cold.

But the strange use of nutmeg that I came across which interests my scientific curiosity the most is the use as sex-stimulating spice for women who have either lost their passion or could do with a little help. And the exciting this about this secret is that it is the women of Zanzibar, Africa who hold the patent to this life changing magic pill for women.

This material that I landed upon was about STONE TOWN in Zanzibar. According to the material even if there were women Viagra on the market, the women of Stone Town would have nothing to with it because nutmeg plays the exact role in their lives.  Again, in Zanzibar, women attending funerals, weddings and other social functions have no regard for alcohol because they do not need it to let go their inhibition. Their new secret is nutmeg mixed with porridge early in the morning before leaving for the occasion.

There are certain things every woman must have in her purse: A pocket mirror, a pen, a notepad, Aspirin (ibuprofen), lip gloss/ chap-stick, cell phone and the usual feminine products. In Stone Town, a woman attending a wedding or funeral doesn’t care about any of the above-mentioned products. The one thing she must have in her purse is nutmeg.

Stone Town is predominantly an Islamic community (95% Moslems). Alcohol is strongly prohibited by Islam. Nutmeg is not. These women, by the gift of nature, use the nutmeg to fill a big gap that  the prohibition of alcohol leaves in their lives.

There’s Viagra for men but women Viagra is not an everyday prescription yet. The price of nutmeg fluctuates around four dollars per pound. For the average woman, this can sustain her for a couple of days. If the women of Zanzibar can improvise with the ‘magic substance’, it shouldn’t be an Apollo IX scale project for scientist to find something for women.

The only disadvantage mentioned is strong taste of nutmeg, which may make it difficult to consume enough of it to get the desired result. Of course, if the active ingredient is extracted, then only milligrams may be needed to get the ‘high’. Even with the current crude form of the material, the sources say a woman needs no more than two nutmegs to “make her eyes soft,”

I’ve been looking for peer-reviewed scientific articles to substantiate the claims of the women of Zanzibar. I’ve hence come across an experimental study by researchers at the Aligarh Muslim University in India. The team found that nutmeg significantly increased sexual activity of rats. This was established by observing an increase in their “mounting frequency, intromission frequency, intromission latency,” as well as erections, quick flips, long flips and the aggregate of penile reflexes with penile stimulation.”

I’m afraid the women of Zanzibar may be holding the patent to a life-changing substance for women, sex enhancing spice. I am employed at the moment and work in somebody’s laboratory so I can not have the luxury to investigate this for myself experimentally to establish the scientific basics for the nutmeg’ sex boosting power. But when I retire and set up my own laboratory, needless to say, research into nutmegs and other country medicines will be a top priority for me.[ad#justluxe_125x125redtag][ad#Adsense-200by200sq]

Revolt in Egypt and Hysteria in Nigeria

The sustained mass revolt in Egypt, that eventually led to the resignation of Hosni Mubarak as President indeed caught the world’s attention while it lasted.

Taking a cue from Tunisia, the Egyptian revolt started albeit jokingly until it gained enough momentum to force out the ancient regime that had been in power for 30 years. One of the major fall outs of the Egyptian crises has been the latent insinuations in different parts of the world particularly Nigeria, on how an exact replica of the Egyptian situation could be staged in their climes. It has been intriguing listening to people in Nigeria serving notice to the status quo that a replica of the mass revolt in Egypt looks imminent in Nigeria.

Indeed the sight of young boys and people praying and protesting in front of Armored Personnel Carriers [APC] and defying the government of the day in the presence of tons of military hardware and artillery remains inspiring. But the Nigerian situation looks tragically different from the Egyptian situation.

It is quite easy for those who think the Egyptian mass revolt could take place in Nigeria, but they must be sincere and ready to ask a few questions and provide answers to them. The questions are

  • Are Nigerians sufficiently angry with the political and economic situation in the country?
  • Are the over 250 ethnic nationalities in Nigeria ready to jettison their multiple loyalties and go after a common enemy?
  • Is there an ideology or theoretical framework, available upon which any mass revolt is going to be built?
  • Is there a concrete post-mass revolt program available which can fill the void created by a mass revolt?
  • Are Nigerians ready to ignore the latter day spiritual mendicants that traverse the entire landscape in the country preaching the gospel of prosperity and confusing the populace that their misery is a result of the activities of the “devil” rather than the misrule of their rulers?

An honest answer to these posers could best gauge whether Nigeria is ready for a mass revolt.

How Far Will African Dictators Go to Quell The New Wave of Popular Uprising?

Protests in Algeria

African countries are going through a dynamic change, a change that the regimes cannot curtail even with the oppressive state apparatuses that have been employed over the years vehemently hold power. Two leadership casualties have been recorded so far; Ben-Ali of Tunisia and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. These protests which regimes describe as social unrest are mainly driven by the use of the internet. Apart from the police brutality and killing of innocent protesters, the main tool with which these leaders are responding to these live demonstrations is the shutting down of the internet. Algeria’s President Abdul-Aziz Bouteflika and Moumah Ghaddafi are examples at point. Will shutting down the internet stop the revolt?

While the Algerians have been on the streets for a few weeks, their Libyan counterparts just joined the ‘wave of protest’ or revolution blowing across the continent. In Libya, Bengazi, one of Libya’s largest cities, is playing host to the uprising just like the Tahir Square in Egypt. The people of Libya have endured the reign of terror under president Ghaddafi in connivance with state security agencies for over four decades amidst numerous human right abuses. Suppression of opposition parties and silencing dissent voices has been the order of the day. But how long will Ghaddafi and his cohort continue to repress the popular uprising from same people they have maimed, traumatized and killed over the years?

One thing about these popular protests or revolution on the continent is their regional spread. The Maghreb states (Egypt not inclusive) that have been under the leadership of ‘Iron-fisted’ leaders are the most affected. The latest trend, however, shows a departure but the same message is the same as Tunisians and Egyptians gave to their erstwhile leaders: Reform government, Change your ways, Give us freedom.

The waves are gradually trickling down to other parts of Africa where people are experiencing similar inhuman conditions. This is a clear demonstration of the fact that basic human needs are the same: freedom and dignity, and that, African leaders are the same also. Therefore, I believe the popular uprising will leave no country untouched except the leaders learn fast to improve the condition of lives of the suffering millions and revitalize their economies, promote fair and balanced elections and respect election results as well as stop human-right abuses.

In line with Obama’s assertion in his speech in Ghana last year, ‘Africa does not need strong men; rather, it needs strong institutions’ that would bring the desirable development the people are yearning for’. African leaders who are not ready to shape their countries for good will be shown the way out by the people. The era of absolute dictatorship is gradually becoming extinct.

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The 2011 Polls in Nigeria and The Opposition’s Lack of Seriousness

Nigerians go to the poll in April 2011 to elect a new President

The political firmament in Nigeria looks bright, with flurry of political activities as the Nigerian people seem set for the polls once again come April 2011.

It may be recalled that the People’s Democratic Party [PDP] has been in power since the advent of civilian rule in May 29 1999. The nearly 12-year rule by the PDP under various leaderships, Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yaradua and Goodluck Jonathan, presents mixed feelings to the multitude of Nigerians depending on where one stands.

However, there seems to be a general consensus among several observers of the Nigerian political scene, and that is the disenchantment with the PDP and its policies. The Political party also seems to be disenchanted with itself as most people fear the party that prides itself as the largest political party in Africa seems set to self implode. The reasons for these may be deduced from the bitter and acrimonious presidential and gubernatorial primaries the party went through recently. Aside from these, other sundry reasons which find roots in the way the party was formed and run since its inception place it in a very precarious situation as it approaches the forthcoming elections.

As for the opposition political parties in Nigeria, two political parties stand out from the pack and they are the only political parties which could give the ruling party a run for its money. They are the Action Congress of Nigeria [ACN] and the Congress for Progressive Change [CPC]. However, what the reality on the ground posits for these two political parties is that unless they form a strategic alliance, it may be difficult for them to wrestle power from the ruling PDP party. This reason for this assertion is attributed to the sectional spread of these two political parties. Hence real politics suggests that they form a workable coalition to battle the PDP. Unfortunately, however, the leadership of these political parties has been so far unable to solve this political arithmetic of forging a sustainable alliance.

Time is running out as the opposition political parties continue to look clueless while the ruling party has hit the campaign trail. Will the opposition parties be able to pull the carpet from the PDP’s feet? Only the April 2011 can tell.

Italian PM Berlusconi Was Chasing Naomi Campbell for Her Phone Number, Wife of British Prime Minister

Italian PM Berlusconi had an eye for Naomi Campbell's number at a G-20 meeting

Life seems to be getting even worse for Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi who is on course to stand trial for allegedly paying for sex with a minor. Now even the wife of a former world leader, is joining in the gossip.

The wife of former British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, says she once saw Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi chasing model Naomi Campbell for her phone number at an official dinner.

Mrs. Brown make this revelation in an interview with the Daily Mail published Saturday that she later joked about the episode with “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling. She did not specify exactly when it took place or whether Berlusconi succeeded in grabbing Naomi’s number.

Campbell attended an official banquet with Brown, Berlusconi and other world leaders during the 2009 G-20 summit in London.

Mr. Berlusconi is known for his go-for-it-all approach when it comes to beautiful women.

Naomi herself has been in the news over the past several months. The “dirty stones” or blood diamond allegedly given to Naomi Campbell by Charles Taylor, the former Liberian tyrant, have dominated his UN trial for crimes against humanity in Sierra Leone.

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Spencer Dissertation Fellowships for Research Related to Education

Approximately 30 non-renewable Spencer Dissertation Fellowships for Research Related to Education are awarded each year to encourage scholars from a wide range of disciplines and professional fields to undertake research relevant to the improvement of education.

These fellowships are not intended to finance data collection or the completion of doctoral coursework, but rather to support the final analysis of the research topic and the writing of the dissertation.

Award Amount: Stipends of $25,000 per year.

Disciplines: Open to all fields. As long as dissertation topic is relevant to education, in the broadest sense.

Citizenship: No citizenship requirements.

Requirements: All predissertation requirements must be completed before activation of award.

Must be candidates for the doctoral degree at a graduate school within the U.S.

Expect to complete the dissertation by the end of the two-year award period.

Contacts: Dissertation Fellowship Program, The Spencer Foundation, 875 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 3930, Chicago, IL 60611-1803, 1 (312) 274-6526, E-mail: fellows[at]spencer.org.

Deadline: November 2 each year.

For further details, and application materials, contact: Spencer Dissertation Fellowships for Research Related to Education

Egypt: Liberal Democracy or an African Democracy? (analysis)

By Patricia Daley

As I watched the scenes of revolutionary protest in Egypt and the reluctance of democratic western nations, self-claimed champions of democracy, to support the will of the Egyptian people, I started to ponder why the use of the term ‘liberal democracy’ has always made me feel uncomfortable, even though I am opposed to dictatorships, one-party rule, and other systems of governance that deny the participation of citizens.

In contemporary political rhetoric, democracy is often seen as the gold standard. Yet, those who uphold it at home and cite it as a reason to pursue warfare, when confronted with people power, are left bumbling. The humanity and dignity of the Egyptian people are at odds with geo-political interests – even when exposed to the full glare of international attention. It seems as if the empire has no clothes.

These events force us to consider the relationship between liberal democracy, empire, global economic dominance, and social Darwinism. The Nigerian scholar Claude Ake, in his book ‘Democracy and Development in Africa’, considers democracy within the history of colonial and post-colonial Africa. Writing of the North’s attitude to democracy in Africa, Ake notes that:

‘Even at its best, liberal democracy is inimical to the idea of the people having effective decision-making power. The essence of liberal democracy is precisely the abolition of popular power and the replacement of popular sovereignty with the rule of law (p.130).’

The evolution of democracy since its origin in ancient Greece has been well-documented and its variants have occupied political philosophers, especially with regards to its manifestations in western societies. Ake discusses how western social science constant clarification of the meaning of democracy has ended in redefining it to the detriment of its democratic values. For example, in the protective theory of democracy, the people are protected from the state through a vibrant civil society. Political stability is dependent on people surrendering participation and political apathy is interpreted as a sign of people being content with rulers.

Ake is critical of the political conditionality of the 1990s and the emphasis placed on multi-party elections, however manipulated, as the marker of a democratic state. This crude democracy is, however, undermined by the political authoritarianism of structural adjustment and poverty reduction and growth strategies, and the continued militarization of African societies through the sale of weapons and military policy interventions such as AFRICOM. Such forms of democracy reinforce the idea that those who reside in developing countries have less right to the benefits of development. As the Caribbean writer, CLR James, points out, Africans in the diaspora have for centuries known the limitations of bourgeois democracy.

Ake concludes by outlining the sort of democracy that Africa needs:

‘…a democracy in which people have some real decision-making power over and above the consent of electoral choice…a democracy that places emphasis on concrete political, social and economic rights as opposed to a liberal democracy that emphasises abstract political rights…a democracy that puts emphasis on collective rights as it does on individual rights…a democracy of incorporation (p.132).’

For Ake, the only way this democracy can be achieved is if Africans take hold of the process; not the elites who, he argues, have ‘ceded the initiative to the international development community’, and appear to ‘neither knowing what to do about the mounting crisis nor being in control of events…they have been weakened by their sheer lack of control, their poverty of ideas, and their humiliation’ (p.132).

To effectuate democracy, one has to address policies of development and ideologies of militarism that leave the masses of people unemployed and impoverished, whilst the elites accumulate wealth through facilitating contracts with multi-national corporations and the purchasing of weapons. Despite the billions of aid that Egypt has gotten from the west, the majority of its people continue to live in impoverished circumstances. Development aid, in this instance, is to sustain an autocratic regime that subjects its people to the will of global and regional hegemonic powers, at a cost to their well-being. It’s instructive that the 2010 Human Development Report for Egypt, notes:

‘…the most striking and unusual finding of this Report is the extent to which youth are excluded from political and civic participation, especially since the definition of youth for this Report is 18-29 years [numbering 30 million], at which time youth are legally empowered to vote and make important social decisions (http://www.undp.org.eg/Default.aspx?tabid=227).’

The report refers to the state of limbo most youth find themselves in, what it terms ‘waithood’ – waiting to start a living, to have the resources to become an adult. This feature of contemporary life is not peculiar to Egypt and, though the report refers to cultural and political factors that contribute to this state, it fails to acknowledge the economic reforms that have destroyed the structures that sustained the societies. The mix of state retreat from social welfare provisioning, privatised education, reduced public sector, and high unemployment, combined with economic policies of extraction, have destroyed the future prospects of young people.

Proposals to include young people through creating separate political institutions fall short because they are envisaged within an economic system that marginalises them. True development and democracy are two sides of the same coin. Both have to be participatory to be effective, and at their core is the principle of self-reliance and direct action by the people – as primary agents of change.

Recently, I watched again an episode of the late Basil Davidson’s 1980s series on Africa. This particular episode focused on early African communities and how they mastered the continent.

Davidson considered the systems of governance that worked and created stability in these communities. It was a system where the communities came together to ensure the survival of each and every member, what people in Africa term ubuntu. This is how the historian, Walter Rodney, in his book ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa’, understood the concept of development; as being dependent on ‘the coming together of the societies in the struggle against natural hazards and to protect their freedom; on this basis humans developed tools and organized their labour to enable social development (p. 2).’ The personal development of the individual is intertwined with that of the collective.

Capitalist development, with its focus on individual choice, may have appeared to deliver material benefits to many in the industrialised countries but this came out of the struggle of the working people fighting for better living and working conditions. Such struggles, what Karl Marx termed, class struggles, are on-going, and are bound to intensify in the late neo-liberal era, as the safety blankets in some welfarist societies in the west are pulled away. As David Harvey and Samir Amin have shown us, inequalities and uneven development are inherent to the capitalist system. Accumulation by dispossession in the global south and former colonial territories continues apace, assisted by comprador elites. Such practices are set to intensify as a result of the economic crises that have recently beset advanced capitalist economies.

Advocates of social justice in Africa and everywhere have to sharpen their tools of analysis to provide directions for non-violent revolutions and to think creatively about the sorts of socio-political organisations that will provide genuine representation. The focus on ‘community’ by international development institutions has sought to de-politicise and de-mobilise transformative collective actions in many states. While the old ideas of socialism may have lost their relevance and organising power after 1989, the principles of collective action, social justice, and popular participation remain as rallying cries for revolutionaries. The lesson from the recent uprisings in North Africa is that the quest for human freedom can never be extinguished.

The Tunisian and Egyptian peoples’ call for an end to dictatorship, military brutality, and their assertion of the right to self-determination forces scholars of social justice to think through how to operationalise democratic principles like those outlined by Ake and long articulated in the philosophy of ubuntu. The people know what they want, but, as social scientists, do we know how to give them what they want?

Pambazuka, by Patricia Daley