|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Questions raised about the South African AIDS initiative
By our South African correspondent
17 January 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
After denying for years that there is an AIDS problem, the
South African government has apparently made an about face and
announced that it will be funding the largest anti-AIDS programme
on the continent.
In his medium-term budget policy statement on November 12,
2003, South African minister of finance Trevor Manuel announced
that R12 billion would be made available over the next three years
for the rollout of a national HIV/AIDS plan that includes the
provision of anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs).
In August 2003, the South African cabinet had instructed National
Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang to develop a detailed
operational plan for the provision of ARVs by the end of September.
It appeared that this sudden turn on by the government emanated
from concerns about the national elections due to take place in
2004.
Several key figures in the African National Congress (ANC)
pointed out that the party has neither answers nor a strategy
to deal with criticisms of how the pandemic has been handled.
When Manuel presented his statement, the cabinet had yet to
consider the Department of Healths draft roll-out plan.
Top South African AIDS scientist Glenda Gray urged an end to the
governments delaying tactics:
I hope the roll-out happens quickly and without any hiccups.
As doctors we are sick of being undertakers and look forward to
being healers.
The plan was eventually announced on November 19, more than
one-and-a-half months after the deadline given to the Health Department
in August. The main features of the plan are as follows:
* One service point in each health district across the country
and, within five years, one service point in each municipality.
* Stepping up the prevention program.
* Expanding programs aimed at boosting immune systems of HIV-positive
people and slowing down the effects of HIV infection, including
traditional health treatments for those who wish to use them.
* Improved efforts at minimising and treating opportunistic
infections.
* Ensuring that the health system can manage the rollout effectively,
including the recruitment of thousands of additional health professionals
and the implementation of training programs to ensure that health
workers have the knowledge and skills to effectively administer
anti-retroviral drugs.
Health Minister Tshabalala-Msimang has remained silent on the
timetable for the rollout, saying it was impossible to predict
when drugs would reach eligible individuals. Government officials
also cautioned that ARVs would not be available for AIDS patients
soon.
Nevertheless, the responses to Manuels statement and
the announcement of the roll-out plan were mostly positive. Dr
Fareed Abdullah, head of the HIV/AIDS program in the Western Cape,
hailed the announcement of the roll-out plan as one of the
most important days in the history of South Africa.
Tshabalala Msimang was reportedly stony-faced, and did not
acknowledge the applause of a group of activists present at the
announcement. The Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) responded more
cautiously. We can only forgive when people get medicines,
and not yetnot one person has medicines yet, said
the TAC chair, Zackie Achmat. He pointed out that more than 500,000
people require immediate treatment if their lives are to be saved,
whilst the roll-out plan will provide ARVs to only 10 percent
of this number. However, the TAC has decided to throw its weight
behind the governments efforts to provide ARVs to eligible
patients.
Despite the relief expressed by AIDS activists, health professionals
and those infected with the virus, there is cause to believe that
the roll-out plan is not all that it seems. Jeremy Nattrass, professor
of economics and director of the Centre for Social Research at
the University of Cape Town, interviewed by the Mail and Guardian,
points out that the budget statement combines substance
with a hefty dose of spin.
Nattrass continues, [I]t is an election budget designed
to give the ANC cover for its largest failingsmost notably
AIDS policy and unemployment.
According to Nattrass, 60 percent of the funds are channelled
to provinces via the equitable share allocation. Provinces
can then essentially spend these funds as they please and not
necessarily on HIV/AIDS treatment.
This assertion is confirmed by research carried out by the
Institute for Democracy in South Africa (IDASA). According to
the institute, [I]t must be stressed that the R12 billion
over the next three years recorded as funds allocated to HIV/AIDS,
includes funds that are to be sent via the equitable share to
the provinces. Although national government is requesting that
these funds be used for HIV/AIDS, provinces have full discretion
to allocate equitable share funds according to their own budget
processes.
IDASA researchers have suggested it is unlikely that all of
the funds would be allocated for HIV/AIDS treatment. They point
out that in the 2003/04 financial year, R1.1 billion was
added to the equitable share intended primarily for HIV/AIDS treatment
and care. However, the research found that in reality the provinces
had only allocated R356 million from their own health budgets
in 2003/04 specifically for HIV/AIDS.
In other words, only 32 percent of the money destined for HIV/AIDS
treatment was actually used for that purpose.
Professor Nattrass maintains that it is pure spin to
describe the budgeted increases in the provincial equitable shares
as if they were fixed and mandated allocations for AIDS.
His conclusion is that a cynic might say that by opting
to allocate additional AIDS money via the equitable share, Manuel
is killing two birds with one stone. On the one hand, he can portray
the government as caring about AIDS and have this message lapped
up by the press. On the other hand, he can give extra resources
to provinces, almost all of which are fully controlled by the
ANC, to spend as they pleasethat is, in ways that maximise
their chance of re-election.
He mentions other indicators that point to the short-term political
nature of Manuels budget statement. Even if one assumes
that all of the money allocated for HIV/AIDS is actually used
for that purpose, then it would be sufficient to cover the treatment
rollout in the 2004/05 financial year, but, Nattrass says, this
happy scenario is manifestly not the case for years 2005/06 and
2006/07, where the AIDS allocation falls short of the governments
own estimates.
The strong implication is that the government is not
intending to fund a full roll-out, and that soon after the election,
will dampen the increase in social expenditure so as to prevent
the deficit from growing.
See Also:
South African government
does about-turn on AIDS treatment
[15 September 2003]
One million deaths
later: South African government continues to stall on AIDS treatment
[2 August 2003]
South Africa: ANC
stalls on anti-retroviral AIDS drugs
[15 August 2002]
South Africa: The
ANC government and the AIDS crisis
[5 July 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |