No, South Africa’s HIV care is not ‘under control’. To pretend so recalls the dark days of Aids denialism | Yvette Raphael and Sibongile Tshabalala

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"South Africa Faces HIV Care Crisis Amid Funding Cuts and Government Denial"

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The health system in South Africa is currently under significant strain, exacerbated by the recent reduction in HIV funding from the United States. Public health workers, researchers, and civil society organizations express deep concern over the government's narrative that the HIV situation is 'under control.' They highlight alarming trends such as decreased testing, the dismissal of frontline health workers, and the closure of clinics that serve marginalized communities. Vulnerable populations, including transgender individuals, sex workers, and drug users, have been largely excluded from transition planning. The discord between the National Treasury and the Department of Health, alongside internal conflicts within the health department, further complicates the crisis. Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi's denial of the seriousness of the situation, and his refusal to acknowledge the impact of the funding cuts, has drawn criticism from various sectors, which argue that his remarks reflect a troubling trend of silencing dissenting voices while evoking memories of past Aids denialism in South Africa.

The article emphasizes that the current HIV crisis is not merely a funding issue but also a governance and leadership failure. The authors call for urgent action from the president, advocating for the establishment of a national task team that includes civil society members, researchers, and frontline workers to address the crisis effectively. They warn that any continued political silence and inaction could lead to a collapse of essential health services, reminiscent of the early years of the HIV epidemic when the government ignored scientific evidence and silenced criticism. The authors, both living with HIV, stress that advocacy should not be viewed as an enemy but rather as a necessary force for truth and accountability. They conclude that the real issue lies not in the health system itself but in the political courage required to confront the harsh realities of the current situation, urging for transparency, urgency, and a commitment to listening to those most affected by the crisis.

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No one should be surprised that the health system inSouth Africais straining in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s cruel gutting of HIV funding. What is shocking is the political will to pretend otherwise.

As public health workers, researchers, academics, people living with HIV and civil society organisations, we reject the narrative put forward by the government that things are “under control”.Testing has dropped. Frontline workers are beingdismissed. Clinics that served our most marginalised communities haveclosed or are strugglingto keep their doors open. And those most affected, such as transgender people, sex workers and drug users, havenot been meaningfully includedin any transition planning. The National Treasury and the Department of Health are at odds with each other. Officials within the health department are at odds with each other.

Aaron Motsoaledi, South Africa’s minister of health, is in denial, refusing to confront the uncomfortable truth that SouthAfricais facing the aftermath of the US funding withdrawal and the failure of its own government to plan adequately and act when the writing was on the wall. And that writing has been there for months.

Last month,he told parliamentthat those “propagating wrong information about the status of the HIV/Aids campaign in South Africa, in the manner that is being done, is no different from the approach adopted by AfriForum and its ilk, which led Trump to thrash the whole country”.

While the minister may try to blur the lines between critique and sabotage, we will continue to meet his narrative with data, lived experience and facts. What we won’t do is sit quietly while being shamefully compared to AfriForum, a group whose entire existence is rooted inprotecting apartheid’s afterlife.

And it’s not just the minister. The president and the so-called government of national unity have, through inaction and silence, allowed this moment to deepen into crisis. Nor has parliament exercised adequate oversight.

The idea that we can fix things through optimism and press briefings rather than coordination, resourcing and urgent national mobilisation is as dangerous as it is disingenuous.

For many of us, this moment drags us back to the darkest days of the Aids-denialism era, when the ANC’s administration under Thabo Mbeki refused science, silenced dissent and abandoned hundreds of thousands of people, leaving them to die while insisting that things were “under control”.

We remember being called enemies. We remember the state gaslighting grieving families. We remember the press conferences filled with half-truths and the rejection of life-saving treatment while garlic and beetroot were hailed as solutions. And we remember that it was civil society, not the state, that finally broke that deadly silence.

To now see activists and researchers once again dismissed, vilified and compared to racist rightwing agitators for daring to question the state’s readiness and priorities is retraumatising. And it is an indication that perhaps denialism in South Africa never truly died. It simply evolved.

Advocacy is not the enemy; denial is. Dissent is not the problem; deflection is.

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Which is why the president must act urgently. It is not enough to acknowledge the loss of funding from the US president’s emergency plan for Aids relief (Pepfar); he must alsoconvene a national task team on health, one that includes all of civil society, the communities most affected, researchers and frontline workers.

If he continues to delay, then he must also admit that the collapse of essential services for HIV and beyond is not an accident but a political choice. We have seen what political silence did during the early years of the HIV epidemic. We are seeing it again now. And parliament must refuse to enable it.

This is not just a funding crisis. It is a governance and leadership crisis. And if we are to preserve even a fragment of what the HIV movement has built, the time for measured concern is over. What we need now is urgency, truth, and power that listens.

Because the real collapse is not in our health system. It is in the political courage to face the truth about it.

Yvette Raphael isexecutivedirector of Advocates for the Prevention of HIV andAids(APHA). Sibongile Tshabalala is national chairperson of the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC). Both are openly living with HIV

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Source: The Guardian