Laxmi, 14, like other
girls of her village, met her husband for the first time at their
wedding. Then she discovered that he was around 30 years her senior,
had two daughters from a previous marriage, was epileptic and
exceedingly poor. After four years of grinding poverty, Laxmi found
a job: at a brothel in Kolkata. A decade later, Laxmi is HIV+.
When Asha's husband contracted HIV, she had no inkling of his
ailment. He had visited the doctor alone and would not talk about
the diagnosis. "It's a man's thing," he said, snubbing his concerned
wife. He soon began falling ill repeatedly. Asha, 35, took up
additional work as a domestic helper in Howrah to sustain the family
and pay for his treatment. Despite having subsequently acquired the
infection, Asha juggles between frail health, work, and being her
husband's foremost caregiver.
These were some of the
stories heard when a team from the School of Women's Studies, Jadavpur
University (JU), Kolkata, which together with Action Aid India, launched
the project to examine the spread of HIV/AIDS and its linkages with
violence against women. The rationale behind the six month long study,
which was released earlier this year, was a finding by the National AIDS
Control Programme III that monogamous women are increasingly at risk of
being infected.
For the study, 60 interviews of HIV+ women were conducted over a period
of six months in several areas of West Bengal. Almost all these women
were from the lower-income group.
The study established beyond doubt that violence against women is both a
cause and a result of the spread of HIV/AIDS in West Bengal. One of the
basic reasons for women contracting of the virus is their helplessness
in negotiating safe sex. This is as true for sex workers as it is for
monogamous women. However, monogamous women often remain more
vulnerable.
Awareness campaigns launched by both government and non-government
organisations have managed to ensure safe sex for at least some sex
workers, usually in areas where they tend to live and work in a
collective. Sex workers, too, have come up with initiatives to negotiate
and ensure that clients engage in safe sex. According to Breakthrough,
an international human rights organisation based in New York, while the
general public continues to believe that most women with HIV/AIDS are
sex workers, official numbers indicate that they make up less than one
per cent of the two million women infected.
Monogamous women, however, lack that kind of support and collective
system to bargain for safe sex with their husbands. Most of the
interviews conducted with married and positive women reveal that they
have no choice but to succumb to their husband's demands. If they
refuse, or voice suspicions that the husband visits other women, they
are beaten up, raped or, in some cases, thrown out of the house. Often,
women just give in. Few put up a fight in any case, having been
conditioned that they are their husbands' property, to be dealt with as
he wishes.
Arati, a positive woman, was blamed by her husband's family for the fact
that her husband visited sex workers regularly. She was accused of 'not
being able to satisfy him' and that her 'shortcomings' drove him to
other women.
Many women were also found to have been simply ignorant of the HIV/AIDS
disease till they were affected. The National Family Health Survey III
has found that only 46 per cent of rural women and 57 per cent of the
entire population of married women aged between 15 to 49 - both in rural
and urban areas - have heard of AIDS.
The overriding reason for this state of affairs is found to be extreme
poverty and the plethora of ills it engenders - illiteracy, early
marriage, economic debilitation and dependency. On the one hand, many
women have no knowledge of the virus; on the other, they cannot
negotiate safe sex with their husbands. Bharti, another positive woman
who had contracted the infection from her husband, was accused of being
immoral and infecting him!
Once infected, however, women become targets of newer forms of violence.
Bharti, for example, was thrown out of her house when her family came to
know of her positive condition. Another interviewee said that after her
husband, who had infected her, died, she was thrown out of his home by
her in-laws, without any compensation or inheritance. Yet another
interviewee who had been infected by her husband revealed that when she
started falling sick, her positive status became known to her employer
and she was dismissed from her job. When the 'basti' (slum locality)
came to know about the infected couple they threatened and harassed them
till they had to leave the place and stay with some relatives.
Worse, however, is the humiliation and discrimination faced by women at
hospitals and health centres where they go for treatment. The study
found that the health structure is such that women need to spend long
hours and commute long distances to access the necessary drugs. Complete
Anti-Retrovial Therapy (ART) is available at only two centres in West
Bengal. Two more centres simply distribute drugs. This not only delays
the treatment but also entails extra expenditure on transport.
Saleha Begum, a domestic help, who lives in Howrah and is HIV+, finds it
an expensive and time-consuming affair to commute to the Kolkata Medical
College on the dates prescribed by the doctor. No medical help is
available at the local hospital. Though local or sub-medical centres are
meant to distribute drugs for opportunistic infections such as diarrhoea
and fever, often when the staff find out that the patient is HIV+, they
refuse to deal with her, advising instead a visit to an ART centre. At
times, in many of the sub-centres, these basic drugs are simply out of
stock.
One interviewee, who had gone to the local hospital for her delivery,
recounted that after the nurses saw her report they refused to touch
her. She was left unattended for two whole days. It was only when the
doctor arrived that she was able to deliver her child. But the baby died
after two days.
The study, which makes several recommendations, proves the urgent need
for a holistic approach to combating HIV/AIDS and for viewing Violence
Against Women (VAW) as a citizenship issue.
The tales of humiliation and pain that have surfaced through the study
are reminders that 38.4 per cent of HIV-infected persons in India are
women and that, as mentioned by the National AIDS Control Programme III,
monogamous women are increasingly at risk of being infected.
(Names of individuals have been changed
to protect their identity.)
July 15,
2007
By arrangement with
WFS
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