← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Bardamu
Thread ID: 17033 | Posts: 3 | Started: 2005-03-01
2005-03-01 04:17 | User Profile
[I]Only in Africa...[/I]
[url]http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?storyID=7749562&type=entertainmentNews[/url]
By Peter Apps
GABORONE (Reuters) - A Botswana beauty pageant crowned 32-year-old Cynthia Leshomo "Miss HIV" on Sunday in a contest aimed at fighting the stigma of the killer disease that has infected more than a third of the population.
[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v230/bardamu/MissHIV.jpg[/IMG]
The twelve contestants - aged 21 to 35 and coached by Miss Botswana 2004 -- strutted on a catwalk in front of almost 500 people at an exclusive hotel resort in the capital Gaborone. They said they wanted to show there was life after an HIV diagnosis.
"This beauty pageant is a beauty pageant but it is beauty with a purpose," said Leshomo as friends and wellwishers thronged the stage following her win in the early hours of the morning.
"We should pull everybody out of that fear of stigmatism."
Botswana has one of the highest HIV infection rates in the world, but has used its diamond wealth to provide life-prolonging anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs.
However, campaigners say many sufferers are unwilling to have tests, put themselves forward for treatment or talk about the disease.
Many of the contestants in the pageant, now in its third year, are voluntary counsellors or health workers. As well as sashaying up and down the catwalk, they answered questions on their attitudes to AIDS and stigmatism.
"Look at me. I'm attractive. I'm HIV positive. What's the big deal?" contestant Anna Ratotsisi told the crowd. But locals say many will still refuse to share cooking utensils or living space with HIV-infected people for fear of contracting the disease.
ANNIHILATION
Leshomo, who works as an AIDS counsellor, will receive a scholarship, free beauty treatment and a monthly allowance after winning the contest. Continued ...
2005-03-01 04:34 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Bardamu]
"We should pull everybody out of that fear of stigmatism."
[/QUOTE]
Is this really a good way to combat the spread of AIDS?
2005-03-13 03:39 | User Profile
[QUOTE=2600]Is this really a good way to combat the spread of AIDS?[/QUOTE]
Probably every bit as promising as throwing millions at Dyncorp to disseminate US-AIDs in Africa.
highest HIV infection rates in the world [...] diamond wealth
Gosh, how odd a place loaded with extraordinarily desirable natural resources would have its human resources ravaged by a modern plague whose vector appears closely tied to the use of plasma derivatives ... assuming the primary classes of victims -- hemophiliacs, Hep-B vaccine users and third-world recipients of "free medical supplies" -- are any indication.