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An Unexpected AIDS Boom in Sudan

Sudan has the highest HIV infection rate in the Middle East and North Africa -- thanks, in part, to its newfound 'peace.'
 
 
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Khartoum, Sudan -- In the impoverished Khartoum suburb of Umbadda, 30 year old Mariam Khalifa casts her eyes downward as she tells the story of what was supposed to be a happy homecoming. But it turned out to be a catastrophe.

When the government finally signed the peace treaty with the rebels in August, 2005, her husband, a soldier in the Sudanese army fighting rebels in the southern jungles, came home after 3 years. Her family and friends gathered from all over Khartoum for a big feast. They pitched in to buy a lamb, slaughtered it in gratitude to God.

But as the days passed, Khalifa noticed that something was wrong with her husband. "He was very weak and sick," she says. "He said he felt he was dying."

Five months later, he did die -- of AIDS. He had contracted HIV while in the army. And in the time before he died, he infected Khalifa.

This story is an increasingly common one in Sudan, says Musa Bundugu, who runs the Sudan office of the United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). "Among the soldiers, many of them are hiv positive," Bundugu says. "They got the disease in the field. They come back and if they are married, what happens? They pass it to their families, to their wives."

For 21 years, a civil war raged on between the Arab north and the non-Arab south Sudan. The war ended in January 2005, but peace has brought a new threat to the country- AIDS. Bundugu says the civil war ironically protected people from AIDS in Central and Northern Sudan. The fighting stopped trade and transport with neighboring countries hard hit by the epidemic. Peace, he says, has brought back HIV-positive soldiers, and returning refugees. "There are a number of Sudanese that are living in Uganda, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya and other neighboring countries that are coming back. One or two or three or 10 persons that are positive can make a very big difference in a period of two or three years," he says.

The government at first was reluctant to address the growing AIDS problem. Sudan is ruled by religious conservatives. AIDS is seen as a disease of those with loose morals. But Sudan now has the highest infection rate in the Middle East and North Africa- 400,000 infected as of 2005- and that has forced the government to take the disease seriously.

Until recently government prohibition made buying condoms impossible in the country. Pharmacist Azizah Hussein says the new directives from the Ministry of Health encourage her to sell condoms to whoever wants them, no questions asked. And she says at the cheap price of $1.30 per 3-pack, they are flying off her stand. "I have to refill it every other day," Hussein says, "Most of them are either students, or poorer people. Even young ladies come and buy them for their boyfriends!"

The government has also launched an AIDS awareness program. Posters plastered on street walls around Khartoum proclaim, "Let's eradicate AIDS." State television urges people to "Get tested -- for the sake of your children." Deputy Director of the government AIDS program, Mohamed Siddeeg, says the campaign is working.

"We are seeing a bigger number of cases coming to the hospitals and coming to the voluntary counseling, and testing services," Siddeeg says. "People are finally coming forward and dealing with their illness, instead of hiding in shame."

But according to Musa Bundugu of UNAIDS, although these campaigns are a step in the right direction, much more could be done, with Sudan's newfound oil wealth. He says the Khartoum government wants to rely on foreign money instead of dedicating a local budget to the AIDS epidemic. But there seems to be plenty of money for other projects. "Why do we need to wait till some money comes from abroad if we can make all these beautiful roads in Khartoum?" Bundugu asks. "But who will ride on the roads in the next 10 years? A sick population?"

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