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How African Women, Including Very
Young Women, Are Vulnerable to HIV/AIDS Infection -- A
Report From Kenya
UN
Integrated Regional Information Networks
NAIROBI, Oct. 21, 2002. When Marita Barassa's husband
died in 1990, she knew he had died of an AIDS-related
illness. She also knew she was HIV-positive herself. So when
his family announced that a cousin would inherit her as his
wife, she realized she had to make a choice.
"I knew I would infect him if he inherited me, and
reinfect myself," Marita, a counselor working with a
Kenyan NGO, Women Fighting AIDS in Kenya (WOFAK), told IRIN.
So she accepted the consequences of saying no to
inheritance. "You are not allowed to inherit your
husband's property or land, you become an outsider, you and
your children are no longer part of the family, you lose
everything," she said.
For many Kenyan widows, who are economically dependent on
their husbands, saying no is simply not an option.
So the age-old custom -- originally conceived by communities
as a means of protecting widowed women and their children -
can easily become a death sentence. In some cases, the
inherited wife lives with her husband's family or other
wives and is thus provided for, while in others a husband
simply "inherits" sexual rights. Either way, the
new wife is expected to produce several children, thus
increasing the risk of HIV-infection to herself, her
husband, and her babies.
Some women end up being inherited several times. Each time a
husband dies of AIDS, or any other illness, his relatives
arrive after the funeral to claim their new
"property".
"Women have no value without a man, you don't have any
respect," said Marita. "A woman on her own is
deemed to be odd, or promiscuous."
Kenyan girls/women and HIV
At the end of 2,000, the Kenyan Ministry of Health estimated
that there were 2.2 million people living with HIV infection
or AIDS. About two million of those were HIV-positive, but
did not know they were affected, and were therefore probably
helping to spread the virus.
While overall numbers of HIV-positive males and females are
about equal, women between 15 and 24 are more than twice as
likely to be infected as males in the same age-group. A
study conducted in Kisumu, western Kenya, found that girls
from 15 to 19 years old were about six times more likely to
be infected than boys.
Studies have also shown that women are three times more
likely than men to be infected through sexual intercourse,
because the vaginal wall is prone to sores and abrasion, and
the viral load in semen is higher than that in vaginal
fluid.
High rates of infection can therefore be attributed to a
combination of biological and social factors. Girls start
sexual activity earlier than boys, have large numbers of
sexual partners, a high prevalence of sexually transmitted
diseases, and are victim to a high incidence of violent
sexual contact. On top of this - and much more difficult to
combat - are the age-old practices such as wife-inheritance,
coupled with beliefs about female roles in society, which
make women and girls particularly vulnerable.
Early sexual contact
Christine Akinyi, a social worker working with Slums
Information Development & Resource Centers in the
capital, Nairobi, told IRIN that most girls she worked with
started sexual activity at around 10, while pregnancy at 13
to 14 was "very common". Now and again, she said,
she came across girls who were pregnant at nine or 10, most
of whom had back-street abortions.
Marita, who in WOFAK works with a wider section of society,
said many girls who did not go to school were sexually
active from 10 or 11, while those who were better educated
tended to wait until their mid-teens.
Daughters of poor parents were often given in marriage at 13
and 14 to much older men, who could provide a dowry, she
said. Parents who did not marry off their daughters were
often aware that they were having sex with older men, but
poverty made them turn a blind eye. "Maybe at home
girls never get proper meals so they are lured into having
sex to get food and clothing," Marita said.
Many older men - known as "sugar daddies" - choose
young girls for sex in the belief that they couldn't
possibly be infected with HIV. Another reason is to avoid
having to pay for it. The younger girls might be satisfied
with sweets, while a regular sex worker could charge
anything from 100 Kenyan shillings, or US $0.80, said Akinyi.
Oral sex could cost half that sum, she added.
Poverty and lack of education are among the greatest
contributing factors to girls' early sexual activity.
"The environment promotes a lot of sexual behavior.
Children grow up knowing it's something you can do for
money," said Marita. Many children from poor households
grow up in cramped, run-down housing, seeing their mothers
selling their bodies, so it becomes a natural progression.
"And once they [the girls] start, they don't
stop," she said. "Mostly teenagers have many
different boyfriends. For those who don't go to school, they
may have a different sexual partner every day," said
Akinyi. The health ministry cites a study in its 2001
"AIDS in Kenya" report showing that 18 percent of
women and girls were HIV-positive within two years of
becoming sexually active.
Rape is another contributing factor. A nationwide study of
Kenyan women aged between 12 and 24 found that one quarter
had lost their virginity because they had been
"forced", the ministry reported. Many Kenyan women
say this figure is grossly underestimated; the incidence of
rape, normally perpetrated by relatives, neighbors or family
friends, is much more widespread, they say. And where force
is used, abrasions and cuts are more likely, thus making it
easier for the virus to enter the bloodstream.
The politics of marriage
Many Kenyans admit that unfaithfulness within marriage,
among both sexes, is extremely common. If a husband is
providing for his wife materially, he is commonly perceived
to be a good husband, irrespective of how he treats her,
said Marita. "It is expected that men have girlfriends.
A man that has only one woman is no man among the
others," she added.
The practice of polygamy, coupled with many sexual partners
outside marriage, renders the spread of HIV within families
extremely easy. Furthermore, rape within marriage is neither
recognized by Kenyan law, nor by the vast majority of men,
Kenyan feminists point out. Neither is a wife's right to say
"no" to sex. "You're his wife, you're
supposed to give in to him," Marita told IRIN.
"You are his property, his belonging. You have no
rights over yourself - your body is his. It doesn't matter
whether you are participating or not."
In cases where wives suspect that their husbands are
unfaithful, or that they may be HIV-positive, there is
little they can do to stop being infected themselves. While
condom-use has increased in recent years thanks to
billboards and advertisements promoting safe sex, most
people agree that condoms are unpopular except with a
minority living in urban centers. "They say sex with a
condom is not sweet, they can't feel each other. They won't
even talk about it," commented Marita.
People's reluctance to admit to their spouses that they are
engaging in risky behavior outside marriage also prevents
them from taking the necessary precautions within it.
HIV/AIDS denial and stigma
Despite the numbers of infected people in Kenya, the stigma
attached to HIV/AIDS remains intense. Some continue to deny
its very existence, especially in rural areas where
superstitions are common. "People see others dying of
AIDS but they still don't believe in it. Some say they were
bewitched, they don't believe it's AIDS," Marita told
IRIN.
Some considered it to be a punishment for past sins, such as
promiscuity or unfaithfulness, or a result of the evil eye,
she said. In turn, many others continued to believe that
"decent", churchgoing people, or "good"
spouses, could not possibly be HIV-positive, and that there
was therefore no risk to themselves.
The culture of secrecy in this staunchly Christian society
remains strong. Despite the huge risks to young Kenyans -
especially young girls - from risky sexual behavior, sex
education in both schools and homes remains practically
nonexistent. "It's just something you don't talk
about," said Akinyi. Kenyan women are supposed to be
virgins when they marry, and that's how people like to think
of them.
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