By DAILY MONITOR | Thursday, October 24
2013 at
10:26
Sarah Kabanda (not real name), is a fish monger in Kalangala District, south of Uganda on the shores of Lake Victoria.
She is quite attractive, cheerful and appears to make friends easily. So I found it easy to engage her in a conversation.
What was shocking, however, was the revelation she made about her HIV status and how she has had unprotected sex with many men.
“I believe I have had unprotected sex with about 80 men since I was diagnosed with HIV,” she says.
Asked if she was aware that she was spreading the virus, Kabanda says that was none of her business.
“I have nothing to worry about since I am HIV-positive. If a man wants to sleep with me, why not?” she says.
Kabanda is not sure when and how she acquired the
virus: “It could be a man I met in 2006 because I discovered in the
morning that he had the type of tablets I take to sustain my CD count.”
Her experience when she was younger, is probably
what led her to live the life she does. She got pregnant while still in
school.
“That is where I made the mistake of my life -
falling in love with a classmate. When my parents learnt about it, they
were furious and could not accept me back in the family. A friend
suggested I take up a job...and got employed as a bar maid. The bar
owner was kind because he provided food and accommodation.”
However, Kabanda says, the pay was quite little
and many of her friends earned extra money by sleeping with the men who
came to the bar.
She was lured into doing the same and only stopped when she got pregnant.
“I continued working for six months when a friend told me about Kiruggu Island, where I am now.
Pregnant again
She told me that I could get free land to grow my
own food. So we took a boat and came. We got the land, some two acres or
so, but it was tough getting money to pay for our basic needs. The good
thing is that we were new in the place and nobody appeared to know our
background. We both resorted to sleeping with the fishermen for money,
which was more paying than cultivating,” she says.
Kabanda became pregnant again and it was during visits to the clinic that she was told she was infected with HIV.
“I was told that I could live a normal life if I
took medication. But I felt broken. The disease is incurable and I
wondered when I would ever settle down and enjoy life like other people.
I accepted my new condition and made up my mind to just enjoy life.
“Nowadays, I have another job besides sleeping with men. I trade in fish and that’s how I support my children,” she says.
Just like Kabanda, there are other people on the island living with HIV and undergoing treatment.
Many men, however, continue to sleep with mostly prostitutes, without checking for their status, or using protection.
In a consultative meeting with different leaders
and stakeholders held at the district's council hall last week, Dr
Edward Muwanga, the district HIV/Aids focal person, said they had
challenges among this category of people because, “people were still
ignorant of how they got infected”.
He added that health centres in the district only
received limited HIV/Aids clients and the enrolment was not expected to
increase in the near future, although many people were infected.
He also said the hospitals lack CD4 machines. And
so infected people like Kabanda thrive in the business of sleeping with
others for some money getting more people infected.
SOURCE: AFRICA REVIEW
SOURCE: AFRICA REVIEW