Plagues,
Pestilences and Diseases
"Secretive' Arab world faces expanding HIV/AIDS epidemic:
experts
By Natacha Yazbeck | AFP
In an Arab world rife with social stigma, government inaction and
often limited access to education and medical care, experts warn
that an HIV epidemic is on the rise.
"In the Middle East and North Africa, the HIV epidemic has been on
the rise for the past decade," said Aleksandar Sasha Bodiroza,
HIV/AIDS adviser at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
"The number of people needing treatment in the region has spiked
from approximately 45,000 in 2001 to nearly 160,000 in 2010,"
Bodiroza told AFP.
"This has put the Middle East and North Africa among the top two
regions globally with the fastest growing HIV epidemic."
A United Nations report released this month said the number of
people becoming infected with HIV has slowed worldwide, with
AIDS-related deaths also on the decline as access to treatment
becomes more widespread.
But the Arab world has been slow to catch up. Here, HIV
contraction rates and AIDS-related deaths are increasing as public
awareness, government response and access to adequate medical
services have been slow to progress.
While there is little reliable data on the Middle East and North
Africa, the United Nations estimates between 350,000 and 570,000
people live with the HIV virus in the region, home to a population
estimated at more the 367 million.
One study, published recently on the open-access Public Library of
Science, put infection rates among men who have sex with men at
5.7 percent in Egypt's capital Cairo -- and at 9.3 percent in the
Sudanese capital Khartoum.
And while some countries have begun to take small steps towards
fighting a growing but hushed problem, shame and stigma show very
little sign of waning in a region where same-sex relationships and
premarital sex are often a crime.
That stigma has become a fact of life for one young man in Beirut,
reached through a group that provides free support for people who
are HIV-positive or suffer from AIDS.
"If I were to sum it up in one word, I would say my life is one
big secret," said the 29-year-old, who has known he is
HIV-positive for three years.
"While I came out to my family a long time ago, this is something
I have not shared with them. I could never burden them with that."
Infection is typically concentrated among high-risk groups,
including injecting drug users, men who have sex with men and sex
workers and their clients.
"Life for someone carrying the HIV virus is very difficult... they
suffer an inability to talk about the disease freely with people
who are close to them, and we have cases where individuals were
kicked out of the family," said Brigitte Khoury, clinical
psychologist at the American University of Beirut Medical Centre.
"So while some families do offer support, it's mainly a life of
secrecy, deception and living in fear of the worst."
That fear, experts say, is often what keeps HIV-positive
individuals from seeking treatment.
"Stigma and discrimination are among the primary reasons that
people living with HIV or key populations at higher risk of HIV
infection do not have access to essential HIV services," Bodiroza
said.
"These two factors also limit the ability of governments and civil
society to provide services."
Many states in the Arab world require that foreigners take an AIDS
test before issuing visas or residency permits.
Making headlines this month was the case of a South African
journalist who was deported from Qatar after being diagnosed with
HIV and sacked by the satellite network Al-Jazeera.
Section27, a public interest legal group based in South Africa,
has asked the country's delegation to the International Labour
Organisation to file a complaint against Qatar.
But some more liberal countries in the region have begun to
publicise the problem, with a media campaign in Egypt and Lebanon
hitting the airwaves and billboards last month.
The "Let's Talk" campaign, which runs until the end of December,
is organised by UNFPA in partnership with the two countries'
health ministries, and encourages people to be tested.
The campaign, which in Lebanon stars a former beauty queen and
wildly popular band Mashrou3 Leila, also supplies a list of free
and anonymous testing centres for both countries.
But despite the tentative progress, experts say governments are
less likely than ever to turn their attention to the rising
epidemic in a region gripped by political upheaval.
"The common thread that links all countries in the region is the
impact of stigma and discrimination, which are (among) the primary
reasons that people living with HIV or at-risk populations do not
have access to essential services," said Bodiroza.
"Without strong leadership, it is unlikely that these issues will
be fully or properly addressed."