Central
Africa: Deforestation brings HIV/AIDS to indigenous communities,
mainly women
Indigenous peoples
living in the tropical rainforests of Central Africa are widely
dispersed and identify their groups by a variety of names. Numbering
a total of 300,000 to 500,000 people, those members of communities
from several ethnic groups characterized by their small stature
are identified under the generic name of “pygmies” (see WRM Bulletin
Nº 119). Considered to be the original inhabitants of the continent,
pygmy populations have lived as hunter-gatherers in the forests
of Burundi, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC),
and the Republic of Congo (ROC) since time immemorial. They have
enjoyed a symbiotic relationship with the rainforest on which
their livelihood, medicinal practices and culture depend entirely.
But now, this delicate balance may be
about to disappear. Intensive commercial hunting, the opening
of roads into the forests due to logging activities, and systematic
deforestation have devastated the rich ecosystem of the tropical
rainforest threatening the very existence of the community. According
to the Rainforest Action Network, “Between 1980 and 1995, Africa
lost more than 10 percent of its forests, or approximately 150
million acres. In the 1990s, the rate of deforestation increased.”
In keeping with their traditions, pygmies
have used to turn to the rainforest in times of sickness. This
relative self-reliance for health services has allowed many groups
to remain isolated from major epidemics that have affected neighbouring
communities, such as cholera, meningitis or even Ebola. However,
as the forests have receded under mining and logging activities,
its original inhabitants have been pushed into populated areas
to join the formal economy, working as casual labourers or on
commercial farms, thus being exposed to new diseases. This shift
has brought them into closer contact with neighbouring ethnic
communities whose HIV levels are generally higher. HIV/AIDS has
spread in the pygmy community.
Studies in Cameroon and ROC in the 1980s
and 1990s showed a lower prevalence of HIV in pygmy populations
than among neighbouring ones, but recent increases have been recorded.
One study found that the HIV prevalence among the Baka pygmies
in eastern Cameroon went from 0.7 percent in 1993 to 4 percent
in 2003.
Speakers at a recent conference held
in Impfondo, 800km north of the ROC capital, Brazzaville, noted
that impoverished Twa pygmy women of communities in Burundi, DRC,
Rwanda and elsewhere were turning to commercial sex work to make
ends meet, but ignorance about the pandemic meant many were unaware
of the dangers of unprotected sex.
"Almost all indigenous women in
Burundi are illiterate ... ignorant of the fact that HIV/AIDS
can also attack them," said Léonard Habimana, Burundi's first
Twa journalist and the promoter of a private radio station, Radio
Isanganiro, which educates people about the dangers of sexually
transmitted infections, sexual violence and HIV/AIDS in pygmy
communities.
"Because of poverty, sexual exploitation
of indigenous women became a common fact," said Kapupu Diwa,
head of a network of local and indigenous populations advocating
for the sustainable management of forest ecosystems in central
Africa.
Commercial sex work has also been bolstered
by logging and infrastructure building, which often place large
groups of transient labourers in camps set up in close proximity
to pygmy communities.
A widely believed myth that sex with
a Twa woman has the power to cleanse men of the HI virus places
Twa women at additional risk. Human rights groups have also reported
widespread sexual abuse of indigenous women in the conflict-ridden
eastern DRC.
Despite these risks, pygmy populations
generally have poor access to health services and information
about HIV. In 2006, the British medical journal, The Lancet, published
a study showing that the Twa consistently had worse access to
healthcare than neighbouring communities.
According to the report, "Even
where healthcare facilities exist, many people do not use them
because they cannot pay for consultations and medicines, do not
have the documents and identity cards needed to travel or obtain
hospital treatment, or are subjected to humiliating and discriminatory
treatment."
Article based on: “Minorities Under
Siege - Pygmies today in Africa”, IRIN, http://www.irinnews.org/InDepthMain.aspx?InDepthId=9&ReportId=58605;
Central Africa: HIV/AIDS a threat to indigenous forest communities,
PlusNews, http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72155