Friday, December 12, 2014

Going beyond zero require new thinking in the fight against HIV



Going beyond zero require new thinking in the fight against HIV
H
IV does not discriminate but people do. We should love and patients of HIV and enable them live fulfilling lives since living with HIV is not a death sentence. Mothers can give birth to HIV free babies and raise an HIV free generation.
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
The recent survey by NASCOP (National Aids and STI Control Programme) shows that 53 per cent of Kenyans do not know their HIV status. This is despite the fact that the government offers free testing and voluntary counseling in public hospitals. The private hospitals and NGOs too create awareness but somehow the message is not home yet.
Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for over 75 per cent of the world prevalence of HIV and Aids. These grim statistics have the health workers and government and everybody else who cares worried.
Change of Tack
There are underlying causes which are deep rooted and to yank them from the social fabric, there must be concerted efforts from stakeholders ranging from multifaceted approaches to change of tack in the fight against the scourge that is intricately interwoven in our society.
Despite the depressing reading which the worrying trends make, there is still hope. The supply of condoms by the government has increased from 10 million in 2004 to 180 million in 2013. The government also provides free maternity services to pregnant mothers. This reduces the rate of mother to child transmissions of HIV and also is a realization of meeting millennium development goals of reducing both child and mother mortality rates.
However, over 1.6 million Kenyans live with the HIV virus according to data obtained from the National Aids Control Council (NACC). The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that Kenya has the fourth highest number of HIV infections in the world.  United Nations Program on HIV/Aids (UNAids) rank South Africa as the global leader in HIV and AIDS prevalence at 5.4 million. Nigeria comes second at 3.3 million and India at 2.4 million. You can imagine Kenya is next at 1.6 million infections.
We must realize that the old methods of HIV protection and cure are not effective anymore. Youths and sex workers are reported to abuse the Antiretroviral Treatments (ARTs) thus causing unprecedented resistance of the HIV virus. This makes the virus mutate and suppress the effectiveness of the drugs administered.   The patients sometimes due to lax follow up and care do not follow the prescription to the letter. When they recover they discontinue the medication. This, again contribute to renewed resistance of the virus.
Blissful Ignorance
Other patients are held back by retrogressive myths and blissful ignorance that hinder the fight against the HIV scourge. They believe in herbal medicine, witchcraft, faith healing and curses. Any wonder that new age “prophets” like Kanyari capitalize on their desperation by claiming to cure HIV/AIDS? The end result of these myths is increased transmission of HIV. Truth is we are far from realizing an HIV free generation. This is particularly so if still the rate of mother to child transmission continues to be witnessed and if our mothers continue to give birth at home under the care of backstreet midwives who risk the lives of the mother, the babies and their own lives.
In Turkana County, the 2012 report titled Kenya Aids Indicator Survey placed the HIV prevalence rates at 7.6 per cent-higher than the national prevalence rate of 6 per cent. In Homa Bay County the situation is worse as a quarter of the population is ravaged by the HIV virus. The prevalence rates stand at a staggering 25.7 per cent. This is according to the Ministry of Health and National Aids Control Council (NACC) findings.
These two counties have striking cultural similarities. There is widespread tradition of wife inheritance and polygamy. Coupled with these are entrenched scape-goating of the people living with HIV and Aids. In Turkana it is an abomination to mention HIV. They call it malaria. People living with the HIV virus(PLWH) are discriminated and suffer from stigma. The fact that they are not accepted leads to the PLWH to develop desperation, despair, hopelessness and stress. They feel they are a bother to themselves and the community. They end up being isolated and waste away without the much needed care and support. This is unacceptable. What happened to loving our neighbors?
Turkana County suffers from grinding poverty and attendant marginalization. The AIDS patients do not get the privilege of boosting their immunity with recommended immunity boosting diets such as fruits and other nutrition supplements that the doctors recommend. What’s more, Turkana is home to the (Kakuma) refugees from war torn countries such as South Sudan and Somalia. The humanitarian crisis is ever real. To access the largest county in Kenya situated in the northern frontier requires massive resource mobilization. This encompasses human resources, medicine and means of transport.
Transactional sex
Turkana is a county that is slowly waking from the slumber of conservatives and embracing modernity at a huge human cost. The discovery of rich deposits of oil in Ngamia I and other wells in the region has attracted investments in the region. In Lodwar and other commercial centers there is rise in transactional sex. This further increases the rate of HIV infections.
In Homa Bay there are many sex rituals that promote the spread of HIV virus. Men do not use contraceptives such as condoms despite the government availing them for free in social centers. Apparently, bodily fluids must be exchanged for the “cleansing” rituals to be properly observed. There are also “kilo” rituals which are conducted overnight. Girls dance in discos as men watch them and place hefty bets on the best dancers. The girl who wins the auction is taken by the highest bidder. The man then goes to sleep with the girl. Money obtained from the auction is shared between the dancer girl and the bereaved family because the disco dances occur at the night festivals aimed at mourning the deceased. I dare say this is a classic case of prostitution.
In Nairobi and other urban centers there is need for the government to develop special programs for sex workers and men having sex with other men (MSM). Apparently, the sex workers get paid three times more when they do not use condom when they have sex with a client. They argue it is more pleasurable.
Proverbial Ostrich
Denial must be confronted. It is encouraging noting that there are community workers who volunteer their time to offer reproductive and sex health education to the infected and the affected. These peer support groups are source of hope and provide solace to those who are living with the virus.
Recently the Church forced an advertiser to pull down an “offending” billboard that advocated for use of condoms among couples who are engaged in the mpango wa kando (clandestine liaisons). The Church denied that cheating among married couples is real and dismissed the advert as a mere channel to promote immorality and promiscuity.  Then what?
Which is better; to watch the cheating couple die of HIV and other related illnesses, give them condoms or continue burying our heads in the sand like the proverbial ostrich?
Abstinence unrealistic
I also take issue with the outdated ABC (Abstain, Be faithful and use Condoms) approach of dealing with HIV and AIDS.  While I do not endorse permissiveness nor do I trash the virtues of faithfulness and self control, there is need to accept the reality that not everybody is accustomed to or lack  the patience to wait, say, till marriage as the Church and parents would want the society to believe. Truth is children are having unprotected sex as early as eight years. Early marriages, school drop outs and abortions point out to a society that is having unprotected sex but is in denial.
When ABC approach does not work it becomes ABCD (D here representing Death).  Youth, especially the campus students fear pregnancy more than STIs and HIV combined. They would rather take morning after pills such ARVs and emergency contraceptives after a night stand than use condoms. The tragedy is that pills do not prevent HIV and STIs. E-pills are most effective when taken within 72 hours but with lack of information on dosage and the fact that the drugs are abused thereby compromising their effectiveness by increasing the resistance and mutation of the HIV virus strains is the stark reality.
In Mombasa and other regions where drug abuse is rife the government should find ways of reaching out to the drug addicts. Most of them are jobless youths who have no purpose in life. The government can get them engaged in gainful employment. This will also scale down youth radicalization and terrorism in the region. Al Shabaab will have no one to recruit into their lost causes of jihad and religious extremism.
They say HIV does not discriminate but people do. We should love and patients of HIV and enable them live fulfilling lives since living with HIV is not a death sentence. Mothers can give birth to HIV free babies and raise an HIV free generation. But this will only happen if they have goodwill from those around them.
Musyoka Ngui is a final year Bachelor of Arts student in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He manages his own blog called Youth Issue        ( musyokangui.blogspot.com) and is also technology reviewer with culturemob.com.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

It is never the victim’s fault



It is never the victim’s fault
My answer to all survivors of sexual or even physical assault is that it is never your fault. Your attacker bears full responsibility, no matter what!
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
Kenya has been visited by untold carnage with devastating human cost and suffering. This violence mainly comes from Al Shabaab terrorists and street idlers. A quick recap is in order. The Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for Westgate Mall attacks, Mpeketoni and Mandera Bus massacre. There have also been witnessed bandit attacks in Kapedo and other smaller scale assaults in other towns in Kenya, mostly the coast, Nairobi and the former North Eastern Province.

Women have not been spared by Nairobi’s street idlers such as touts and loaders in bus parks. A total of at least three women have been stripped in broad day light. This humiliation is actually terrorism of domestic violence scale. It is as physical and psychological turmoil just like other forms of terrorism.
DISGUSTING AND UTTERLY UNFAIR
In the process of apportioning responsibility to those who are entrusted to protect the victims, the victims have been blamed for what befell them. It is disgusting and utterly unfair. Pundits took issue with President Kenyatta’s seemingly blame he laid squarely on the victims. The president had said that the citizen have the responsibility to protect themselves. The infamous “usalama unaanza na mimi na wewe”( security starts with me and you) narrative was invoked. Community policing is a good idea but where are the fruits of Nyumba Kumi project?

In his article Is President Kenyatta endorsing vigilantism? on Sunday Nation November 30, columnist Dr. Lukoye Atwoli observed “While one must agree that in general we need to be more vigilant and civic-minded, it is utterly irresponsible to suggest that everyone, and therefore no one, is responsible for our collective security. It is distasteful to ask, as the President did, why anyone left a three-year old girl with her uncle who eventually defiled her. The fact is that three-year-olds are supposed to be safe with their uncles. Women are supposed to be safe on our streets and in our matatus!”
HEALING THE PAIN
In his closing remark he argued “When we use intemperate language such as that employed by the President in reference to sexual and physical assault, we worsen the physical and psychological pain of the survivors, and delay healing. We shift the blame to the victims, and leave them asking if there was anything they could have done to provoke the attack, or to prevent it.

My answer to all survivors of sexual or even physical assault is that it is never your fault. Your attacker bears full responsibility, no matter what!. Atwoli is commenting from a point of authority since he is a consulting psychiatrist and the Dean, Moi University School of Medicine.

In an equally same scathing weight, George Kegoro wrote an opinion on the same day in the same paper titled It’s a sad day for Kenya as Uhuru pushes blame to victims. To quote him he said: “...from the President Uhuru Kenyatta’s reaction to the Mandera attack, the President indicated that there was no way the government could provide a policeman for each individual in Kenya, that the government had done its best, and that what now remained is for citizens to play their part in their own security. Thus, the President transferred responsibility to the citizens for the security lapse in Mandera, or any future security lapse”.

Victims of sexual violence are blamed for what befell them, justified with remarks such as “She asked for it”.

Kegoro concluded by arguing that the President “resorted to victim-blaming and exempted the government from responsibility for security” “.... the President’s speech was insensitive to the victims and survivors of violence and shows regrettable empathy for victims of serious crimes”,  Kegoro argued.

The victims of any form of violence deserve justice. The perpetrators must be brought to book.  The least that the president could have done is to apologize.
Any wonder that Oyunga Pala satirically wrote on Crazy Monday on November 23 2014 that “A woman gets assaulted and stripped while dressed in jeans, at a public bus park, in broad day light in front of onlookers. The male reaction? “Sorry and I do not advocate women getting assaulted but some women should also learn to dress decently”. The victim was actually decently dressed and the said jeans were not even a tight fit. “Sorry that these touts are ill mannered but some people just like asking for trouble. What was she doing there in the first place?”
SHOW COMPASSION
He concludes by offering a nugget of wisdom that “sex education should be introduced in school if for nothing else than to teach the meaning of consent and assault. Masculinity is not a power trip. Mature men who know better, have to start mentoring youth in their spaces. Offering good advice and providing solid examples.”


“To my younger brothers, forget all this real men bravado and start by being a decent guy. Showing compassion will not diminish your manliness,” he rests his case.

Victims, remember that it is never your fault.
Musyoka Ngui is a final year Bachelor of Arts student in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He manages his own blog called Youth Issue        ( musyokangui.blogspot.com) and is also technology reviewer with culturemob.com.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Are writers born, made or both?



Are writers born, made or both?
A
s a writer, strive to be faithful to your subjects. Let truth be your hallmark. Balance your story. Tell all sides of the story and let every subject’s voice be heard
You cannot separate journalism from writing.  In Kiswahili, journalists are better known as waandishi wa habari (literally translated as writers of news/information) than wanahabari (journalists). Early journalism was print media. Reporters wrote news for newspapers and magazines well before the invention of radio, television and the internet.

It is only understandable that the name “writer” for a journalist has stuck to an extent of being used in the place of newsreaders, anchors and other mass media contributors.
GOOD JOURNALISTS SCRIPT EFFORTLESSLY
In fact a good journalist is an excellent scripter. He or she can write a news article and edit it effortlessly. For the journalist it is not a struggle. The words just come. It’s like an inspiration.

Which brings me to whether journalists and writers are born, made or both. I believe a talent is required in any profession. One must be competent to undertake the task they are assigned. That is why there are journalism schools teaching budding journalist so that they may later go to the field and practice.

Back to my earlier argument, journalists can be born.  This is a very beautiful discovery anyone can make in their life. Realizing that you were born to do something could be the ultimate purpose in life. May be discovering your purpose in life could more satisfying than the pursuit for happiness.
INNATE TALENT
Someone who was born a writer has an innate talent that the teacher cannot teach. The best the teacher can do is to perfect the skills the student has and watch the talent take shape. Such people have boundless potentials and it is important that they realize that and exploit the potential to the fullest.

A born writer can make a very good journalist because essentially journalism places a lot of premium on excellent writing skills. The audience has great expectations on the writer journalist. They thus cannot afford to be below par. The trend they set is emulated by their competitors and their (audiences)-readers, listeners and viewers.

Methinks many a writer journalists belong to the last category. They are both made and born. It is unfortunate to be only a made writer or journalist. This is because you will go as far as your teacher will take you. Although with experience you can improve, it will be a struggle to cope with the tough calling of journalism. You might end up quitting the career altogether or switching to another one. It is not a bad thing to change careers. But what took you so long to realize you were in the wrong place in the first place? Anyway, it is never too late to start anything in life. You can turn around things in youth as well as an elder. But the earlier you discover your place the better.
BLEEDING PASSION OF LETTERS
Those who are born writers are by nature artistic. They like critiquing literature, they love reading and definitely they write. You cannot be a good writer if you do not read intensively and extensively. For a writer there is no topic under the sun which is off limits. A born writer observes nature and phenomenon and can never lack a comment. The writer will give a candid and wise commentary that is worth remembering. Others get philosophical even. It is in their blood. If you cut their veins, they are likely to bleed letters. After all, they are men of letters.
NURTURED WRITER JOURNALIST
A writer journalist by nurture can also fulfil his or her career if he/she is committed and dedicated. The nurtured writer journalist must be willing to learn and accept that they are inadequate. To cover up for that inadequacy, he/she should practice the skills they acquire. If you are willing to learn nothing can stop you from becoming a pro. Aspire to perfect your skills. Read great literature by great authors. You can also benefit from unsung writers and journalists who have never been celebrated by anyone. They may be unpopular but have produced great works. Read them. Watch and listen to their presentation styles and try to practice what they do. You don’t have to copy but you can borrow skills that can make you a better writer and a journalist.

Writing can be inspirational. Ideas excite the writer; they tickle their imagination and provoke the writer’s creativity. If the idea is viable the writer will execute it.

A writer is supposed to be keen and observant. You can have a small note book to jot down the ideas and sketch your roadmap to a good story. With technology you can now capture ideas on your smartphone camera, save a reminder on your phone or make use of those calendar and notebook apps on your phone that are lying idle. That way you will not forget what provoked you to write a story.
INSPIRATIONAL WRITER
It is beautiful to actualize a dream.  Transferring an abstract idea from your mind to paper or to a screen, airwave or wherever is both transformational and creative. You bring forth life and contribute to knowledge.

Budding writers especially the young ones have been accused (by older established writers) of being lazy and impatient. It is true. To succeed in writing you need to be patient and hard working. You must be willing to read and think. You will be required to research on a topic that is alien to you.

I have been both a writer and an editor. I understand the pain of rejection of a manuscript and the condemnation that you get from your editor for doing a story shoddily or in a hurry. The editor wants you to be a better person. You should not give up. Repeat what you have been instructed and keep in mind that tomorrow you will incorporate the correction in your work. Eventually you will be excellent. But if you get angry that they editor is despising you, you will never go anywhere in your career. You may go far but in the wrong direction.
EARN TRUST AND DON’T JUDGE
Trust is earned by a good writer. Journalists know this better. Your subjects need to trust you that you will tell their story as they would. This is a high standard by any criteria. As a writer, strive to be faithful to your subjects. Let truth be your hallmark. Balance your story. Tell all sides of the story and let every subject’s voice be heard in your composition. Do not suppress the opposing characters in your work. Above all, leave the audience to judge. Making sense of a situation does not mean that you dictate what the audience will perceive as reality. Remember they are also intelligent. Don’t insult their intelligence.

Develop a reputation of a faithful medium of the many stories that you will be entrusted to cover in your career and you will be trusted with high level assignments that will not only grow your career but also positively change the lives of the people that you so passionately want to let their narrative be heard.

Musyoka Ngui a final year Communication and Media student at Chuka University and a blogger at Youth Issue (musyokangui.blogspot.com) and also a technology blogger with culturemob.com.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Boy, after you lose, no one will remember you/May be, but when you lose, no one will let you forget*



Boy, after you lose, no one will remember you/May be, but when you lose, no one will let you forget*
S
adly, the best leaders are the ones who never were. They are the presidents that never got elected, the managers who never got appointed and the drivers who never occupied the steering seat.
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
When Nigerian writer and 1986 Nobel Laureate for Literature Prof. Wole Soyinka was asked by Talk to Al Jazeera host Folly Bah Thibault, what influence or the enduring legacy he would want to leave behind he said: “Oh, simply the recollection of the fact that I passed through.”Soyinka seems sure that he will leave indelible footprints in the sands of time. He claimed that definitely there will emerge other better writers from the African continent but was not sure whether they would advance the ideology of concerned humanist that he is. He dismissed them (young writers) as lazy and insincere.

Soyinka’s worries cannot be wished away by those who care about the future of their lives and what will become of their destinies if someone else took over the reins of power. Will they be promising or they will just collapse into a heap of despair after years of hard work and dedication?

I have been poring through literature and looking at the question of legacy in the face of leadership and how that shapes how the memories the prominent people linger around in the minds of their subjects. I am sorry that some of our actions will not outlive us. Writers like Soyinka have the privilege that their works will immortalize them forever.
NOT MERE MORTALS
So what makes people remember Tom Mboya, JM Kariuki, Pio Gama Pinto, Malcom X, Nelson Mandela, Mother Theresa of Calcutta, Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King? They were not mere mortals. They are eternal heroes and heroines who secured a permanent place in the annals of history.

Some leaders in history will be forgotten as soon as the mourners leave their funeral requiem masses. Before the cement on their graves dry and long before grass grow around their burial site.
BAD EXAMPLE
To be remembered by humankind you must do something exceptional. Be their hero. Deliver them from the jaws of disasters- human, artificial or natural. Be dependable, reliable and indispensible. It’s about excellence. Take the call of duty to serve passionately and make a difference in the lives of your people. But if you are mediocre and average no one will remember your input. You will be forgotten actively like a bad dream. Children will be raised by being warned by parents that they should not be like you. You embody a bad example not worth emulating. Generations will be reminded how not to be like a tyrant, a dictator and a ruler that ran down a once promising economy by stashing public funds in foreign accounts and appointing cronies and relatives in strategic posts to continue the dark tunnel vision of looting, predation and anarchy.

Role models will be cherished. They are honest and sincere. They talk truth to power and offer constructive criticism. They are the alternative thought when the authorities are stuck in obsolete methods which do not work. They should be listened to when they speak because they ooze intelligence, wisdom and rare knowledge that they wilfully offer for free for the sake of humanity. What more service can the society want from them?
GOOD RIDDANCE
Sadly, the best leaders are the ones who never were. They are the presidents that never got elected, the managers who never got appointed and the drivers who never occupied the steering seat. People are left wondering and imagining how the world would be advanced if such fellows were given the opportunity to serve. But I say good riddance for ignoring a prophet at home. The problems you go through will forever remind you that it is because you rejected the concerned humanists and kissed the tyrant because he was moneyed or was born into wealth but lacked both the will and ability to lead you.

Concerned critics end up being unpopular with the ruling elite. They vie for elections and fail, they apply for jobs and get rejected and pay the ultimate price of their unshakable stands against wrongdoings in the society. They are murdered or mysteriously disappear and their fate basically is shrouded in intricate controversy and mystery so much so that we will never know what actually caused their death.
*The title of this piece was adopted from the animation movie “Monster University”.
Musyoka Ngui is a final year Communication and Media student at Chuka University and a technology blogger with culturemob.com.