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Mozambique Journal part 3: February
11th. & 12th. 2002
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February 11th. |
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Sunshine and fun
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Everyone
woke very early today. We had all slept well, under the mosquito nets. It
was a glorious morning, with a brilliant sunrise, and a pleasant
breeze from the Indian Ocean. The monkeys were perched high in the treetops
at the edge of the hotel, and people were already setting out into the
gently sloping hills to go to work in the fields.
It
was 5:30 am, and all seemed well in this world. Of course, it isn’t.
Over
breakfast, Peter was telling us how the tradition of brothers taking care of
the wives of their dead siblings is a significant issue. Not the tradition
of caring for the family – that is critical. But there is a belief that
having sex with the brother will release the widow from her angst over the
death of her husband. And if the husband died of Aids, what becomes of the
brother and the rest of his family? That is the problem. No easy answers,
although informed debate and education seem key, balancing long standing
cultural needs with today's realities.
We
spoilt ourselves with a short walk along the beach. Like a bunch of kids, we
dipped our feet into the surf, laughing and letting off steam. Then we split
into two groups. |
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Provincial
Government
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Samuel led our group, to meet the
Gaza Provincial Governor, Rosario Lualeia. Like all Governors, he was
appointed directly by the President. Like all Governors, he was late.
Structurally,
each Province has a Department Head that mirrors the Government Ministries.
The Judiciary is of course separate, and there are no separate Provincial
taxes. But virtually everything else that happens in Gaza passes over the
Governor’s desk.
Governor
Lualeia said that the Province had a nucleus of specialists working on
the orphan issue, and asked that Save the Children help, especially at
Community and Village level, and with new funding. He believed that Gaza was
very prone to the spread of HIV as a) many of the men were miners in nearby
South Africa, and they caught HIV there, and b) many of the young widows in
Gaza were promiscuous. Now, it is difficult to deny his comments – both are
almost certainly true. We just would have wished for a broader attack on
the need to educate everyone about HIV / Aids.
If
the HIV infection rate nationally in Mozambique is 13/14%, we’d guess it
approached 20% here amongst the adults. Driving out of town past the park,
we couldn’t help but noticing the
Aids awareness symbols painted on the
trees. We did not see any signs for home made coffins, as we had in
Lilongwe. |
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Child headed
household
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Our
next stop was the Julius Nyerere Village, where we met with a
young
family who had lost their parents and most of their kin. The head of the
household of 4 is Felizmina Maposse (aged 14). Her siblings are Jaime (8),
Maida (7) and Precida (4). They can only afford for Jaime to go to school.
Whilst
we all enjoyed the visit, and playing with the children in the bright
sunshine, this visit raised issues amongst us not unlike that of Mangochi
Hospital. Whilst we need to understand how the very many child-headed
households work, were we unduly singling out this family from their
community? Why should we interrupt their difficult enough routines? What
would an anthropologist say? |
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School programs
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The
final stop was at Magul, to visit the school and to see the Youth
activities. It is a big facility, with 940 students from 6 to 17 years old.
There are 14 teachers, and 10 school rooms – it was opened in 1995. Shades
of Cambodia, although bluntly spoken the children here were in better
educational shape than in Anlong Veng & Trapang Prasat. The programs here
were similar to those we had seen in other villages –
drama, singing and
self help groups. Here, though, the school was the focus and not the village
itself.
From
here we had a long drive back into Maputo. When we arrived, some of us met a
local NGO to compare notes, and some went to a Photographic Exhibition on
“Living with Aids” which was photographed by Magnum, and sponsored by the
National Aids Council. And some spent time at the American Embassy meeting
with the Ambassador and advisors. Somehow we never managed to find more than
a few moments to compare notes – that will come tomorrow. |
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February 12th. |
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National Aids
Council
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 Today
was packing day, although we had one last appointment to keep. We met
Janet Mondlane, the Executive Secretary of the National Aids Council.
Janet was born in the US, but has been in the Country since 1962, and has
long held Mozambican nationality. The Council was founded by the ex
President of Mozambique, and is probably the pre-eminent coordinating
authority in the Country.
Janet
described her job as helping to bring together a vast array of NGO’s,
researchers and Government Departments who have differing agendas but one
overall goal – reduce the threat of Aids. The most important partner is the
Ministry of Health, with the Ministry being “curative” and the Council being
“preventative”. The Council’s strategic focus is
on encouraging programs which are:
- Multisectoral - which means everyone has to
give up something in return for the greater good and impact.
- Community based – which puts a lot of
pressure on good reporting and financial management.
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Janet
is very interested in working with Save the Children, especially on COPE
type programs, as the methodology is exactly in line with their approach.
One of the issues is that much work needs to be done in the Northern
Provinces, whereas most of the funding is for the South. A Council focus is
to build prevention programs where incidence of HIV is relatively low –
which effectively means starting in the Central area of the Country, and
then go North. Save will meet with Janet after we left to figure out how
best to partner – possibly building on the food security programs and access
the Agency has in the North.
Another
critical Council activity is setting up a comprehensive database to
highlight success and “holes” in the programs across the Country. Malawi has
a CRIS database, courtesy of UNAIDS, and the Council is about six months
away from completing theirs.
There
is a “Common Fund” which the Council has created to provide for projects. On
the issue of control, in Janet’s view it doesn’t matter if things are
centralized or not - as long as it is good work, and the Council knows about
it to be able to encourage learning and replication.
Rather
tellingly, Janet expressed the view that stigma is not the same in all
countries. In Mozambique, she felt massive change would only happen when
“they were selling coffins in the street, and the orphan issue was as big as
Uganda had”. In fact I made a mental note to check further the Ugandan
story. Apparently some key elements in that Country’s turnaround seem to be
focusing on impact mitigation on children, giving them the right to choose
who will care for them, and establishing clear children’s property rights.
It is also clear that the society's focus moved from "extended family" more
towards "local community". |
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We
discussed “Why should the West care”? Janet pointed us towards speeches by
Tony Blair & Gordon Brown, and by Bill Clinton. Ignore the partisan, and
focus on the core issues. Yes, it is a crucial humanitarian test for the
world. But in Janet’s view, Aids in Africa is also a National Security
issue. It directly affects the UK and the Commonwealth Countries, and
threatens the US via disaffected and desperate people.
A
final, positive comment. “Aids is bringing Communities together as nothing
has before – we need to harness that spirit”. It
was a wonderful summation for the entire trip.
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The
group said their farewells to Janet and other members of the Council, and
headed to a debriefing lunch with the Save staff. It was a fairly short trip
after that to the airport, en route to Europe and the US via South Africa.
We
had learnt a lot, and needed time to pull all the threads together. But it
would be an understatement to say that we had been touched by all we had
seen and heard. Let us hope we can make a difference. |
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Save
the Children
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the Children COPE stories
Malawi
Journal
Malawi
Journal part 2
Malawi
Journal part 3
Malawi
Journal part 4
Malawi
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Malawi
Journal part 6
Mozambique
Journal
Mozambique
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Mozambique
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Last updated
September 18, 2004
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© yates family 2002
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