UNHCR reaffirms commitment to combat HIV/AIDS

News Stories, 1 December 2003

© UNHCR/S.Hopper
Promoting awareness of HIV/AIDS at the World AIDS Day event at UNHCR's Geneva headquarters.

GENEVA, Dec 1 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency today commemorated World AIDS Day, calling for refugees to be included in HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programmes, while at the same time dispelling the misperception that refugee populations always have greater rates of HIV/AIDS than national populations.

In an opinion piece on World AIDS Day, High Commissioner Ruud Lubbers wrote, "The trauma of war, violence and persecution, followed by the misery of exile, are often the sad destiny of refugees. In parts of the world affected by HIV/AIDS, the plight of the uprooted is even worse. Not only are refugees accused of spreading HIV and other diseases, but they are often excluded from multi-million-dollar HIV/AIDS programmes."

He called stigmatising refugees as HIV carriers "morally repugnant" and "grossly unfair", noting recent studies showing that in some countries, refugees have lower HIV rates than the surrounding population.

High Commissioner Lubbers addressed UNHCR staff and the public at an event at the agency's Geneva headquarters on Monday, when he called for UNHCR to ensure that refugees live in dignity, free from discrimination, regardless of their HIV status, to provide at least the core HIV/AIDS interventions during emergencies and more comprehensive programmes linking prevention to care in stable situations.

Safiye Cagar, Director of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA)'s Office in Geneva, and Kevin Ryan, Director of the Positive Lives Project, also spoke at the Geneva event. Awareness-raising items and goods made by people living with HIV/AIDS in South Africa were on sale, with proceeds going towards people living with the disease. Condoms were also distributed on the day.

The event featured a photo exhibit called the Positive Lives Exhibition, which depicts people living with HIV/AIDS in a positive manner. The exhibit travelled to refugee populations and camps in Angola, Namibia and South Africa in September and October in the run-up to World AIDS Day. It served as a starting point for discussion groups among the populations with the aim of reducing discrimination and stigmatisation.

UNHCR has increased its resources and efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in the past 18 months, expanding activities in Africa and hiring three regional HIV/AIDS coordinators. The agency has focused its resources for HIV/AIDS on Africa, which faces the world's highest HIV/AIDS rates and hosts the second largest population of refugees. In 2004, UNHCR plans to expand its efforts to West Africa and Asia.

In nearly a dozen countries, from Angola to Zambia, UNHCR carries out education campaigns to encourage refugees to protect themselves against the virus, and to reduce the stigmatisation of people living with HIV/AIDS. Other efforts include condom promotion, improving health and community services, voluntary counselling and testing, training of health workers and camp staff, income generation activities for people living with HIV/AIDS, and home-based care to allow affected individuals to receive the attention they require while remaining near loved ones in a familiar environment.

The refugee agency's increased focus on HIV/AIDS appears to be having an effect.

Paul Spiegel, UNHCR's Senior HIV/AIDS Technical Officer, has observed a change both within and outside the agency. "UNHCR staff, both at headquarters and in the field, are beginning to understand the consequences that HIV/AIDS currently is having on refugees' protection, health and general wellbeing. It will only worsen in the future. Meanwhile, host governments and donors are slowly beginning to realise that refugees cannot be excluded from HIV/AIDS programmes that target their nationals. By doing this they are only fighting part of the battle."

In Southern Africa, field staff also report positive results of the agency's awareness efforts. "The biggest impact we have seen in the past year is that returnees to Angola are more aware of HIV/AIDS because of the intensive education activities that have been going on in the camps in host countries," said Laurie Bruns, UNHCR's Regional HIV/AIDS Coordinator in South Africa. "We hope that because of this heightened awareness, the refugees will contribute to HIV/AIDS education in Angola itself on their return to their home communities."

World AIDS Day events were also organised in various field operations with refugees themselves.

In South Africa, where refugees live in urban settings rather than camps, UNHCR and its implementing partners have promoted refugee participation in World AIDS Day events planned by local government and civil society groups. Refugee youth and refugee women have been particularly encouraged to participate in the day's activities.

In refugee camps in Namibia and Zambia, and other countries in the region, intensive awareness campaigns have been conducted in the days and weeks leading up to World AIDS Day. The campaigns use creative media such as drama, music and poetry to convey the messages of non-discrimination and positive living throughout the refugee and local communities. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, two Congolese women with HIV/AIDS visited Kilueka camp to share their experiences and put a human face to the disease.

Other activities in the field included a press conference on HIV/AIDS issues with other UN agencies in Kyrgyzstan, and information materials distributed to Afghan refugees returning home from Iran. In Serbia and Montenegro, UNHCR has been active together with other UN agencies in publicising World AIDS Day through television spots, media outreach and training, posters and other awareness-raising events.

UNHCR is also focusing globally on HIV/AIDS in the workplace, distributing to all staff worldwide the International Labour Organization (ILO) code of practice on HIV/AIDS and the world of work. Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) treatment kits have also been given out to offices in the field, accompanied by training for staff on how to use them to reduce the chance of HIV infection after exposure through sexual assault or occupational exposure.

At the Geneva event, the speakers highlighted this year's World AIDS Day theme against stigma and discrimination under the slogan, "Live and Let Live". High Commissioner Lubbers and UNFPA's Cagar noted the particular difficulties of stigmatisation faced by refugees.

"HIV and AIDS do not discriminate and we must not either," said Cagar.

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HIV and Reproductive Health

Treatment for HIV and access to comprehensive reproductive health services.

Public Health

The health of refugees and other displaced people is a priority for UNHCR.

Health crisis in South Sudan

There are roughly 105,000 refugees in South Sudan's Maban County. Many are at serious health risk. UNHCR and its partners are working vigorously to prevent and contain the outbreak of malaria and several water-borne diseases.

Most of the refugees, especially children and the elderly, arrived at the camps in a weakened condition. The on-going rains tend to make things worse, as puddles become incubation areas for malaria-bearing mosquitoes. Moderately malnourished children and elderly can easily become severely malnourished if they catch so much as a cold.

The problems are hardest felt in Maban County's Yusuf Batil camp, where as many as 15 per cent of the children under 5 are severely malnourished.

UNHCR and its partners are doing everything possible to prevent and combat illness. In Yusuf Batil camp, 200 community health workers go from home to home looking educating refugees about basic hygene such as hand washing and identifying ill people as they go. Such nutritional foods as Plumpy'nut are being supplied to children who need them. A hospital dedicated to the treatment of cholera has been established. Mosquito nets have been distributed throughout the camps in order to prevent malaria.

Health crisis in South Sudan

UNHCR and Partners Tackle Malnutrition in Mauritania Camp

The UN refugee agency has just renewed its appeal for funds to help meet the needs of tens of thousands of Malian refugees and almost 300,000 internally displaced people. The funding UNHCR is seeking is needed, among other things, for the provision of supplementary and therapeutic food and delivery of health care, including for those suffering from malnutrition. This is one of UNHCR's main concerns in the Mbera refugee camp in Mauritania, which hosts more than 70,000 Malians. A survey on nutrition conducted last January in the camp found that more than 13 per cent of refugee children aged under five suffer from acute malnutrition and more than 41 per cent from chronic malnutrition. Several measures have been taken to treat and prevent malnutrition, including distribution of nutritional supplements to babies and infants, organization of awareness sessions for mothers, increased access to health facilities, launch of a measles vaccination campaign and installation of better water and sanitation infrastructure. Additional funding is needed to improve the prevention and response mechanisms. UNHCR appealed last year for US$144 million for its Mali crisis operations in 2013, but has received only 32 per cent to date. The most urgent needs are food, shelter, sanitation, health care and education.

The photographs in this set were taken by Bechir Malum.

UNHCR and Partners Tackle Malnutrition in Mauritania Camp

Kuwaiti Funds Provide Vital Medical Aid for Syrians in Lebanon

As the number of Syrian refugees in Lebanon continues to grow, ensuring access to quality health care is becoming an increasing challenge for humanitarian aid groups and the international community. So, Kuwait's unprecedented donation in April of US$110 million for UNHCR's Syria crisis operations this year came at a most opportune time. Slightly more than 40 per cent of the amount has been used to fund programmes in Lebanon, including the provision of vital - and often life-saving - medical care. In the following photo gallery, photographer Shawn Baldwin looks at the essential work being done in just one Kuwaiti-supported clinic in northern Lebanon. The small Al Nahda Primary Health Care Clinic in the town of Beddawi has a staff of seven doctors and one nurse. Between 600 and 700 people seek medical attention there every month and the clinic meets the needs of some of the most vulnerable refugees.

Kuwaiti Funds Provide Vital Medical Aid for Syrians in Lebanon

Chad: Health for allPlay video

Chad: Health for all

Refugees in southern Chad receive health care under a European Union-funded programme. A new clinic tackles malaria, malnutrition, respiratory infections and more.
Jordan: Getting Health CarePlay video

Jordan: Getting Health Care

In Jordan's Za'atri Refugee Camp, dust and heat are taking their toll, especially on young children.
South Sudan: Providing Health CarePlay video

South Sudan: Providing Health Care

Mobile clinics and hundred of community workers are mobilized to bring health care to the refugees in Yusuf Batil Refugee Camp.