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The death of Mandelas son and the ANCs AIDS policy
By Patrick OKeeffe
22 January 2005
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On January 6, a frail and grief-stricken Nelson Mandela announced
that his son, Makgatho Mandela, had died of AIDS. Makgatho, 54,
was Mandelas only surviving son. His first son, Madiba Thembekile,
died in a vehicle accident in 1969 while Mandela was still in
prison.
In a statement to the media, the former South African president
said, Let us give publicity to HIV/AIDS and not hide it,
because the only way to make it appear like a normal illness like
TB, like cancer, is always to come out and to say somebody has
died because of HIV/AIDS. And people will stop regarding it as
something extraordinary.
The HIV/AIDS pandemic affects at least 5 million South Africans.
The first news about a sudden worsening in Makgathos
condition appeared in December 2004, when it was reported that
Mandela had rushed to the bedside of his gravely ill son. At that
time, the nature of Makgathos illness had not yet been made
public.
Nelson Mandela joins the ranks of prominent South Africans
whose lives have been directly affected by the AIDS epidemic.
Last year in May, the leader of the Inkatha Freedom Party, Mangosuthu
Buthelezi, disclosed that he had lost two children to AIDS.
In 2003, Peter Mokaba, a prominent ANC politician and AIDS
denialist, died amidst widespread speculation that
he had succumbed to the disease. In 2000, South African President
Thabo Mbekis director of communications, Parks Mankahlana,
suddenly passed away, giving rise to speculation he had been infected
by HIV, although spokespersons for the presidency maintained he
had died of anemia.
While in the US in 2003, Mbeki claimed he did not personally
know anyone who had died of AIDS.
Makgatho Mandela, an attorney, was able to afford private medical
treatment at Johannesburgs Linksfield Clinic, but millions
of HIV-infected South Africans are entirely dependent on services
provided by the state.
Much hope was invested in the Department of Healths Operational
Plan for Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Care, Management and Treatment
for SA (the so-called Operational Plan), published after lengthy
delays in November 2003. Amongst other things, the plan entailed
the rollout of anti-retroviral drugs to those whose infection
had progressed to a certain point.
The Operational Plan
The initial goal of the Operational Plan was to extend care
and treatment to 50,000 people by March 2004. However, by October
2004, fewer than 15,000 people had received treatment. While the
Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), a non-governmental organisation
that campaigns for the government to fund AIDS treatment, supported
the Operational Plan, they pointed out that approximately 400,000
people needed immediate treatment if their lives were to be saved.
When the Operational Plan was released in November 2003, the
main document referred to two annexures, or appendixes, which
were respectively a week-by-week schedule for the pre-implementation
period with deliverables for each of the main focus areas
and The Detailed Implementation Plan. These two annexures,
which contained vital information for holding the government accountable,
were not included in the main document.
On February 20, 2004, the TAC requested the annexures from
the minister of health, but received no response. On March 2,
the TAC filed a formal request under the Access to Information
Act, for access to these documents. This request was simply ignored
by the Department of Health. An internal appeal under the terms
of the Act was then lodged by the TACs attorneys. This too
was ignored.
On September 29, some seven weeks late, the minister of health
filed an answering affidavit. In her response, the minister stated
that the references to the annexures in the Operational Plan had
been an error, and that no approved annexures existed. The annexures
to which the Operational Plan had referred were, in fact, time-lines
prepared by experts from the Clinton Foundation. These had never
been approved by the Cabinet.
The minister further maintained that there was no obligation
to make the time-line annexures, which she referred to as drafts
or working guidelines, publicly available.
As soon as the TAC was informed of the status of the documents,
they addressed a letter to the minister of health, demanding costs
by virtue of its [the Department of Healths] gross
negligence and unconstitutional conduct in creating the confusion
that gave rise to the applicants request for access to the
annexures in the first place, and then failing to clarify the
true state of affairs for some ten months in the face of repeated
requests.
On November 4, the case went to the Pretoria High Court. A
judgment was handed down in favour of the TAC, and the minister
was ordered to pay their legal costs.
Shortly thereafter, the Department of Health released a statement
blaming the TAC for litigation costs of some R5 million since
2001: It is regrettable that the limited resources earmarked
for improving the health of all South Africans, including people
living with HIV and AIDS, have to be spent in resolving legal
disputes lodged by the TAC.
The TAC responded, stating, It is indeed regrettable
that the TAC had to litigate against the Minister of Health to
compel her to implement her Constitutional obligations.
What this episode clearly illustrates is that, in all probability,
there never was any detailed roll-out plan. The Operational Plan
released in November 2003 was intended for public consumption
just ahead of the 2004 general elections. With the elections over,
the political motivation to implement even the limited provisions
of the Operational Plan evaporated.
ANC attacks the Treatment Action Campaign
In the aftermath of the TACs court case against the minister
of health, the ANC led a concerted assault against the TAC and
its allies.
An article attacking the University of the Witwatersrands
AIDS Law Project and the TAC was published on the ANCs web
site on November 5, elaborating on the Department of Healths
initial statement and again accusing the TAC of obstructing government
efforts to deal with the pandemic.
A further assault was launched against the Medicines Control
Council and the TAC by Matthias Rath, the owner of Matthias Rath
Inc., a pharmaceutical company that manufactures and sells expensive
vitamin products. Rath promotes himself as a provider of natural,
as opposed to synthetic, medicines, and accuses pharmaceutical
companies of unethical behaviour. Amongst other things, he claims
his products can cure cancer. Rath has also said that he supports
South African Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, and has
allied himself with the Traditional Healers Association.
Rath ran a series of advertisements in the Mail & Guardian
newspaper accusing the Medicines Control Council of being in the
pockets of drug companies: ...all of its [the MCCs]
decision-making members are directly or indirectly on the payroll
of the pharmaceutical industry. He also maintained that
the TAC has been financially groomed by the Rockefeller
Foundation and is attempting to silence all critics
of the devastating side effects and ineffectiveness of AIDS drugs.
Rath also demands the disbandment of the TAC.
When the MCC sought to litigate against Rath for his advertisements,
on the grounds that they were defamatory, the minister of health
intervened and blocked the Council from taking this course of
action.
Amongst the governments allies in its refusal to deal
decisively with the AIDS epidemic is the National Association
of People Living with HIV/AIDS (NAPWA), a body funded by the Department
of Health. An article by Lucky Mazibuko of the Sowetan
put the spotlight on NAPWA and its insidious role. According to
Mazibuko, NAPWA became a perfect and convenient restorer
of credibility in the governments continued legitimisation
and justification of the Department of Healths outright
refusal to provide anti-retroviral treatment to millions of people
living with HIV and AIDS. Mazibuko reported that NAPWA was
acting as an unofficial spin-doctoring cover...to polish
the dented image of the Department of Health....
On December 17, a further assault against the TAC was published
on the ANC web site, entitled, Nevirapine, Drugs & African
Guinea Pigs, which attacked the safety and efficacy of Nevirapine,
the main drug used in the program to prevent mother-to-child transmission
in South Africa, and accused the TAC of being a tool of the multinational
drug conglomerates.
The TAC issued a rebuttal to the article, pointing out that
what it called new concerns about the development of resistance
to AIDS drugs in those who receive Nevirapine have actually been
known for some time. However, in terms of mother-to-child transmission
prevention, its [resistance to AIDS drugs] weight is small
in comparison with the potential benefit of providing a single
tablet of Nevirapine to the mother and a few drops to the baby.....
The TAC added that its long history of fighting drug companies
to provide cheap, safe and effective medicines was hardly the
profile of an organisation in league with multinational pharmaceutical
interests.
The ANCs attack on the provision of Nevirapine to HIV/AIDS
patients, and especially to HIV-infected pregnant mothers and
newborn infants, is particularly worrisome. Although government
policy currently entails the provision of single-dose Nevirapine
to pregnant mothers and newborn infants, the opposition to this
program that has emerged indicates that something else is afoot.
In the absence of a detailed implementation plan, this program
remains, along with condom distribution, the cornerstone of the
governments response to the epidemic. While it is accepted
that, wherever possible, a multi-drug regimen should be implemented,
should Nevirapine be removed as an option, even the small number
of people currently receiving treatment will be further reduced.
The consequences of this will be certain death for thousands of
people.
The attacks against the TAC by Tshabalala-Msimang-supporter
Matthias Rath, the Department of Health and the ANC point to a
concerted effort not only to smear and discredit the TAC, but
also to sow confusion amongst the general population about the
need to roll out universal anti-retroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS
sufferers.
The pattern of events over the past year indicates that despite
the publication of an Operational Plan, the governments
position on the treatment of AIDS has not shifted since the 2002
Constitutional Court ruling that ordered them to roll out Nevirapine
as part of a mother-to-child transmission prevention program.
The Operational Plan appears to have been little more than an
electoral ploy.
Mandelas announcement that his son had died of AIDS is
consistent with his approach to the epidemic. Mandela, unlike
Mbeki, has never placed himself in the camp of the denialists.
His public statements regarding the epidemic, and his association
with various AIDS fund-raising events and charities, indicate
his views diverge widely from those held by certain elements in
the ANC and government.
Despite Mandelas opposing views, he has not been subject
to public criticism from the ANC. Nor has Mandela publicly criticised
Mbeki or Health Minister Tshabalala-Msimang. However, he cannot
fail to recognise the recklessness and unpopularity of the governments
approach to the pandemic, and the danger that it poses to South
Africa and the political future of the ANC.
Mandela, through his various actions and utterances, is articulating
the concern within the South African establishment about the impact
of the AIDS pandemic on the stability of social and economic relations
in South Africa. The next general elections in South Africa are
due in 2009. By then, according to the Actuarial Society of South
Africa, an estimated 1.4 million South Africans will require anti-retroviral
therapy.
See Also:
South Africas
health minister says of AIDS sufferers: Let them eat garlic
[16 February 2004]
Questions raised about
the South African AIDS initiative
[17 January 2004]
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