/ 14 July 2004

Aids orphans place strain on households

By 2010 more than one in five children in Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland and Zimbabwe will be orphaned by Aids, a joint United Nations and United States report warned on Tuesday.

“Children on the Brink 2004” is the fourth edition of this biennial report, based on surveys conducted by UN Children’s Fund (Unicef), the Unaids and the US Agency for International Development (Usaid).

Alarmingly, the studies found that 20% of households with children in Southern Africa are taking care of one or more Aids orphans.

About 78% of Zimbabwe’s orphans and 77% of Botswana’s had lost their parents to Aids. Botswana, with 20% of its children orphaned, has the highest rate of orphaning in sub-Saharan Africa, followed closely by Zimbabwe with 19%.

More than 15% of children in Lesotho, Zambia, Swaziland, Mozambique and Angola were orphans in 2003. About 63% of Swaziland’s orphans had lost their parents to Aids, as was the case with 60% of Zambia’s orphans.

Unicef’s executive director, Carol Bellamy, told a press briefing in Bangkok, Thailand, this week that the number of Aids orphans worldwide has shot up from 11,5-million in 2001 to 15-million in 2003. “The worst may still be ahead of us – far too many [parents] will die,” she warned.

“While not all orphaning is due to HIV/Aids, orphaning remains the most visible, extensive, and measurable impact of Aids on children … After losing parents and caregivers, children have an even greater need for stability, care and protection … HIV starts to affect a child early in a parent’s illness, and its impact continues through the course of the illness and throughout the child’s development after the parent’s death,” the report noted.

According to the agencies’ surveys, orphans are increasingly more likely to be living in households headed by females or grandparents. In Zambia, for example, female-headed households are twice as likely to care for double orphans — children aged under 18 who have lost both parents — as male-headed households.

“Female-headed households also take in more orphans than male-headed households. In South African households that have assumed responsibility for orphans, there are on average two double orphans in each female-headed household, while in male-headed households the average is around one,” the report said.

The burden on grandparents and older caregivers is increasing. The reported observed that in Namibia, “the proportion of double orphans and single orphans [not living with a surviving parent] being taken care of by grandparents rose from 44% in 1992 to 61% in 2000”.

In the absence of their primary caregivers, Aids orphans are more susceptible to health risks, violence, exploitation and discrimination.

The report highlights the strategic “Framework for the Protection, Care and Support of Orphans and Vulnerable Children Living in a World with HIV and Aids”, endorsed by all the UN agencies last year, as the “best hope for pulling orphans and other vulnerable children back from the brink”.

The strategy calls for strengthening the capacity of families by prolonging the lives of parents and providing economic, psychological and other support; mobilising and supporting community-based responses to provide long-term assistance to vulnerable households; ensuring that orphans and vulnerable children have access to essential services, including education, health care and birth registration; and ensuring that governments protect the most vulnerable children through improved policies and legislation.

The report notes that at the end of 2003 only 17 countries said they had a national policy for orphans and vulnerable children. — IPS