The Vice President of Botswana, Lieutenant General Mompati Merafhe arriving at an FBO launch
*Banki Kaba 21, a member of Rara Apostolic Church in Zion based in Selibe Phikwe is one of the many target population members targeted by Botswana Christian AIDS Intervention Program (BOCAIP) with multiple concurrent partnerships and alcohol messages. Onalenna has been a member of the church for the past three years but has been having three boyfriends despite the sermons she has been receiving in church from the elders and pastors warning them to desist from such behaviours. BOCAIP approached the church to have sessions to sensitize the youth on the risks associated with MCP and alcohol abuse facilitated by a peer educator. According to Onalenna, she was jolted into changing her behaviour when the peer educator demonstrated how quickly HIV moves within the network. “The peer educator encouraged me to not only go for testing with my partner but to also get rid of the other partners and remain with my long term partner,” she said.
*Gaba Nko, 29 years, did not only engage in MCP but also drank alcohol which always led her to have casual sexual partners afterwards before she heard the message on alcohol reduction and MCP. She confesses to always feeling guilty after the encounters but she did not stop her behaviour. She was motivated to change her behaviour because of the support she received from the peer educators and other members of the group at the weekly sessions. “The sessions emphasize faithfulness and abstinence before marriage because we are christians, she adds.
People like Onalenna and Beauty in church settings would not have been able to change their behaviours if their churches did not allow BOCAIP to conduct the IPC interventions. Rara Apostolic Church in Zion’s leaderships’ decision to agree to this initiative to host weekly Wednesday meetings for all the youth by a peer educator who is also a pastor at the church is reaping dividends as Banki encouraged her friend to attend the sessions and has since seen the importance of fidelity in combating the spread of HIV. There are several churches that BOCAIP is working with on this initiative; the United Congregational Church of Southern Africa (UCCSA) is one of them.
Reverend Segwape, a peer educator for UCCSA started working with BOCAIP recently when he got transferred to Selibe Phikwe and says message seems to be received well after every presentation he makes during their sessions .According to Segwape, often after the presentation, people, reflect especially on the behaviors of the people on the MCP flip chart that he uses to facilitate the class.
Segwape says the messages on fidelity and alcohol abuse resonate with what is in the bible. “The church already had related messages drawn from scriptures in the bible, the response promises a change as the messages emphasize what the church is already preaching,” he said.
Selibe Phikwe, a mining town, has the highest HIV prevalence and incidence in the country standing at 26.5% and 4.6% respectively according to BIAS III. Incidence in women aged 25-29 is higher at 40.6% compared to men of the same age at 13.9%. Multiple Concurrent Partnership and alcohol abused have been linked to risky behaviours which puts one at a risk of contracting HIV. http://webcamsdolls.com
In an effort to address this issue the Government of Botswana has scaled up prevention by formulation a national strategy on addressing MCP. PSI is the leading technical agency which came up with concepts of the communications campaign titled O Icheke- Break the Chain of multiple concurrent partnerships which was launched in March 2009 together with other stakeholders. One of the stakeholders and also a donor, the United States Government through the Presidential Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) is funding PSI to award grants to faith and community based organization to implement interventions in 13 districts in the country. A total number of 10, 579 people have been reached with messaging through this project by BOCAIP since January 2010 to date.
Success stories such as this can be found across Botswana. Morwalela’s national reach has helped raise awareness of key issues that affect the wellbeing of the people of Botswana.
For more information, please contact Botho Tlhobogang, PSI/B Corporate Affairs Coordinator: [email protected].
*Names have been changed to protect identity of the participants