Wednesday November 26, 2003 4:31 PM
By ALEXANDRA ZAVIS
Associated Press Writer
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - AIDS has already orphaned more than 11 million
African children under the age of 15, and ``the worst is yet to come,'' warns a
report issued by the U.N. Children's Fund.
By 2010, there will be about 20 million children in sub-Saharan Africa who have
lost at least one parent to AIDS, bringing the total number of orphans in the
region to 42 million.
In the worst affected countries - Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland and Zimbabwe -
more than one in five children will be orphans by 2010 - more than 80 percent of
them because of AIDS, according to the report ``Africa's Orphaned Generations,''
which was issued Wednesday.
Even in countries like Uganda, where HIV prevalence has stabilized or fallen,
the number of orphans will remain high because of the proportion of adults
already infected with HIV - few of whom have access to life-prolonging
anti-retroviral drugs.
These children - half of them between the ages of 10 and 14 - are left without
critical guidance, protection and support, the report warned. They are also at
risk of malnutrition, physical and sexual abuse, and exposure to HIV infection.
``We need to move beyond feeling beleaguered to feeling outraged by the
unacceptable suffering of children,'' UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy
said in a statement Wednesday.
Extended families are caring for 90 percent of African orphans, the report said.
In many countries, a growing number of these households are headed by women and
grandparents. Already generally poorer, they are less and less able to provide
adequately for the children in their care - and their burden is only set to
increase.
To make matters worse, many of the most severely affected countries have no
policies to address the needs of orphans, the report found.
The failure to respond to the orphan crisis jeopardizes not
only the children's future, but also the development prospects of their
communities and countries, it said.
Sub-Saharan Africa is home to nearly three-quarters of the world's HIV-infected
population. Eight out of every 10 children who have lost parents to AIDS live in
this region.
Children in HIV affected households begin to suffer even before a parent dies.
Not only do they go through the trauma of witnessing their parents' illness and
death, but they are likely to be poorer and less healthy than other children,
the report said.
Household incomes plummet when adults fall ill from HIV
because they can no longer work full time, if at all. The amount of land they
cultivate drops, and with it food supplies, even as health care expenses soar.
Many children are forced to drop out of school because they can't afford the
fees, have to care for a sick parent, or need to earn money.
As a result, they are more likely to suffer damage to their cognitive and
emotional development, to have less education, and to be subjected to the worst
forms of child labor - including domestic work, quarrying and commercial sex
work - UNICEF warned.
The report argues that the course of the crisis can be altered by providing
immediate help to families and communities, including offering free basic
education, giving them safe and viable options for earning a living, and
providing them with financial and other assistance.
This is critical in a region where only around 1 percent of the 29 million
people living with HIV and AIDS have access to life-prolonging medicines widely
available in wealthier countries, UNICEF said.
``We must keep parents alive and ensure that orphans and other vulnerable
children stay in school and are protected from exploitation and abuse,'' Bellamy
said. ``The future of Africa depends upon it.''
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