Abigail was madly in love. When she became pregnant, her boyfriend became more and more jealous. He hit her. Abigail stayed. His brother tried to warn him: “This guy sees other girls. » She didn’t want to hear anything. Then she caught him with a woman. She forgave. He had a child with another. Abigail never filed charges for the beatings, but she eventually left. “I understood that, if this continued, I was going to fall ill”says the young woman of 22 years.
Shortly following leaving her boyfriend, she pushed the door of Childline, an association supporting adolescents in the township of Soshanguve, north of the South African capital, Pretoria. Abigail took a moment to decide. “I was afraid of being judged but here we don’t judge you, because we know that most girls go through the same thing”, she says as an evidence. South Africa is one of the most violent countries in the world towards women. In 2017, the country had a feminicide rate five times higher than the global average, according to the United Nations.
A year later, Abigail has regained her confidence and is now the one who advises girls in the neighborhood to end toxic relationships. But the young woman knows she was lucky. Months following warning him regarding the risks of sexually transmitted diseases, his sister confided in him that she was HIV-positive. “That’s when I realized how easy it was to catch him. My sister is a shy person, I wouldn’t have thought this might happen to her. »
The fear of judgment
Like many HIV-positive young people, Abigail’s sister has not told anyone regarding her status for fear of judgment, too. It is however far from being an isolated case. Each week, more than 1,600 new infections are detected in adolescent girls and young women, or a third of all new infections in South Africa. Between the ages of 15 and 24, they are three times more likely to contract HIV than men of the same age.
“Many young women are infected following having suffered sexual violence or some form of coercion. And it is they who suffer the harm, not the aggressors who contaminated them., analyzes Dr. Nataly Woollett. A psychologist specializing in trauma, she conducted a study on the perception of health services by HIV-positive young people, and currently works with young pregnant women who are victims of violence. “Nurses do not respect them, girls are accused of being frivolous, undisciplined, or of having no morals”she says.
“In the clinics, in general, you are told that you can only blame yourself, because you have had several partners. What did you expect ? Sometimes people sneer when they see the treatment you’ve come for, and within an hour the whole neighborhood knows regarding it.”, adds Abigail. If South Africa is the first center of the HIV epidemic in the world – 7.8 million people live with the virus – the disease remains taboo, and the harshness of the public care system, saturated, hits adolescents even harder than adults.
“Most of the time, boys send their girlfriends to be tested. If it is negative, it means that they are too, ”says Melokhule.
Consequence: in a study published in 2019 in review The Lancet HIV, researchers estimate that less than half of young people who test positive for HIV are on anti-retroviral treatment in South Africa. Yet the country has the largest antiretroviral program in the world. Within the general population, 93% of infected people know their status, and three quarters of them are receiving treatment.
Fear of stigma also deters young people from sharing their status with their partners. “When they try to talk, the other often ends the relationship, accusing them of infidelity or blaming them for their past sexual activity”, continues Dr. Nataly Woollett. For their part, several young women recount the difficulty of getting men to accept condoms: “We have to convince them, they imply that we don’t trust them”, says Melokhule. As for screening, “Most of the time, boys send their girlfriends. If it’s negative, that means they are too.”continues the young woman.
” No is no “
Melokhule realized she was in a toxic relationship too thanks to Childline’s ‘No Means No’ program, which educates young women regarding abuse. “I understand that some things you think are acceptable are not. When your boyfriend tells you: “Stop drinking, you’re drinking my money” or that he thinks you belong to him because he gives you money to go out, it’s not normal”, she says today. At 20, following three years of relationship, she left her seven-year-old companion.
“A lot of girls don’t understand that they are in a forced relationship; for them, it is normal. Even in the case of a transactional relationship with an older man. The families accept, because he puts bread on the table. Often, it’s not to buy nail polish or go to the hairdresser, it’s much more dramatic. Everyone knows, but no one says anything, silence marks a form of acceptance”details Nataly Woollett, who underlines the impossibility of talking regarding sex within families.
Long remained on the sidelines of the fight once morest sexually transmitted diseases, the prevention of violence once morest women is now at the heart of the fight once morest HIV in South Africa. Specializing in child protection since the end of the 1990s, Childline is one of the associations on the front line. Since 2019, she has raised awareness or supported more than 13,000 young women, through workshops ranging from professional support to learning self-defense, including budget management and psychological support. In total, Nacosa, the network of associations of which it is a member, hopes to reach 200,000 young people over the next three years.
Summary of our dossier AIDS in Africa: the time of hope
This article is part of a dossier produced as part of a partnership with the Global Fund.
Mathilde Boussion(Johannesburg, correspondence)