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TAJIKISTAN: AIDS TIMEBOMB TICKING
Nargis Zakirova: 10/29/02
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from IWPR
The number of Tajiks officially registered as having HIV
has risen ten-fold in the last 18 months amid fears the spread
may soon reach critical levels. According to official figures,
there were just seven people registered as having HIV along
with one case of full-blown AIDS up until 2000.
In the country of six million, there are now 75 officially
registered HIV cases, mostly people in their 20s who inadvertently
discovered their status when undergoing medical examinations
in prison. And this could well prove just the tip of the iceberg,
with Zukhra Khalimova, executive director of the Soros Foundation
in Tajikistan, telling IWPR she believes the real figure is
actually over 2000.
International Health Organisation, IHO, methodology backs
this, putting the number at between 1500 and 4000. The growing
drug traffic from neighbouring Afghanistan is considered one
of the major factors, with a spiralling number of young addicts
in Tajikistan in recent years. Once hooked, medical experts
say, many share needles, facilitating the spread of HIV. Another
cause says the director of the Centre for Combating Aids,
Murodboki Beknazarov, is the mass seasonal migration of people
to earn some money abroad.
Over half a million Tajik citizens - and many sources say
the figure is twice as high - head to CIS countries for temporary
work, most of them in Russia. "We had cases when the
HIV infection was brought in from neighbouring countries by
labour migrants," said Beknazarov. "How many of
these cases there actually are, no one knows, as women in
rural areas only go to medical institutes in extreme situations.
At the same time, the labour migration comes from these very
rural areas."
Beknazarov points out that the reason more cases are coming
to light is because over the last two years a more vigorous
registration process has been put in place. In the past, little
was done in this respect because of the 5-year civil war,
which ended in 1997, and its aftermath.
At a recent conference on the situation in the capital Dushanbe
(October 15-16), participants were unanimous in stating that
the rise of the disease throughout the region could soon become
critical. Within the Central Asian region, Tajikistan is seen
as one of the most vulnerable countries because it has the
longest border with Afghanistan and the weakest economy.
The future spread of the disease in Tajikistan looks particularly
grim if the number of drug addicts is taken into account.
Over 5,000 are now officially registered and the United Nations
Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, UNODCCP, puts
the real figure closer to 100,000. Weaker post-Soviet borders,
years of civil war and increasing opium production in Afghanistan
following the fall of the fundamentalist Taleban regime are
all blamed for a recent explosion in numbers.
Makhmud M, a drug addict for two years, provides a stark
picture of the risks people will take to get a high. "When
we're in withdrawal and we don't have time to go to the chemist,
we shoot up in a circle with one needle - sometimes there
are five to six of us. You don't even think about AIDS, all
you want is to get high," he said.
The very first person in the former Soviet Union recognised
to have HIV was a woman from Tajikistan who left to study
in Leningrad in 1985 but contracted the disease while working
as a prostitute. She is now buried in her birthplace of Khujand,
the country's second largest city which grimly records the
vast majority of the country's notified HIV cases, 65 - up
from 48 last year.
Around the globe, over 40 million people have been infected
with HIV since the start of the epidemic although better drug
treatments mean people in many country's are able to live
for years - even decades. But with the annual drugs bills
for one patient totalling around 10,000 US dollars, this is
far out of reach for the population of the poorest of the
former Soviet republics, making prevention all the more crucial,
says Khalimova.
One method of tackling the problem has been the setting up
of 15 "trust" centres around the country which allow
drug addicts to anonymously exchange used needles for new
ones.
While international bodies have backed these, there have
been problems with centre employees complaining that local
law-enforcement agencies want to control them and seek to
arrest drug addicts who attend. Oinikhol Bobonazarova, a well-known
Tajik human rights activist, says that a number of people
with HIV have come to her seeking protection having been abused
and humiliated by police waiting around such centres.
Indeed, she believes the censorious, secretive attitude of
society actually facilitates the spread of the disease, with
even doctors showing a lack of respect or refusing to treat
HIV-positive addicts. "In Tajikistan, HIV infected people
are not treated like sick or doomed people, they are treated
like criminals. Our society is not yet ready for mercy,"
she said.
This article originally appeared in Reporting Central
Asia, produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting,
http://www.iwpr.net.
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