Friday, 30 September 2016

Sex is "optional" & Menstruation is not


Sex is "optional" & Menstruation is not 
condoms being distributed at roadblocks
I am back again, after a very long time. My wish is to be as consistent as possible in posting on my blog but due to my tight schedule and work I find minimal time to post something.  Anyways today I felt so compelled to create time and pen down my views on an on-going debate that has been trending on social media. I first saw the post on a friend of mine’s wall with a huge number of young people cheering and agreeing to the sentiments he shared, I commented and debated on the issue and felt it wasn’t enough; hence I opted to do more. After a very short space of time the debate grew to an extent that a few friends from neighbouring countries were also talking about it. The thoughts of this fellow were that Condoms should be sold and sanitary pads should be free...sex is optional and menstruation is not. Quick two things that came to mind when I saw this; there about 70% of Swazis living below the poverty mark with less than a dollar to survive per day and the 26% of Swazis who are HIV positive.

For a moment I thought this was a feminist battle judging from the fact that women need pads more and at the same time people who talk about condoms more often are men, but later on I discovered that this was just a normal issue and both genders seem to be supporting it. Engaging this issue from the Swaziland context one must mention that both condoms and pads are very important and we need to reach a point as a country where we are able to provide both to the public for free. There none availability of free pads might be one of the fuelling factors to HIV infection, as young girls engage in unsafe sex and intergenerational relationships in exchange for money to buy immediate needs such as pads. On the same note in as much as sex is “optional” as highlighted by the dear friend people do it quite a lot and that “choice” (sex) is responsible for quite a number of things in our society, firstly it is responsible for the now approximately 10 000 new infections every year, about the 0.5% deaths of the total population and more than anything it is responsible for marking Swaziland to the whole world as we have the highest HIV prevalence rate in the world. Worth noting is that in the early years before the introduction of condoms, the infection rate was almost double if not more than now, the same with deaths. 
Bus rank condom distribution

Having young people who strongly feel and support these statements at this point In time scares the hell out of me. In such a state of affairs we cannot fool ourselves and forget that HIV/AIDS currently remains one of the biggest challenges that we are facing as a country and further pretend that when condoms get sold the sex rate will decrease. I think at some point as Swazis especially young people in general we have to remember that there are things that are Important but not urgent and Things that are important but urgent. This is a principle that should also guide ones actions in life and I assume even tackling this issue requires us to be in that mode currently. Regardless that quite a number of young girls cannot afford to buy sanitary pads, which is a hygienic issue but realistically speaking in the absence of free pads can’t we assist each other in buying than to substitute free condoms for free pads. This wouldn’t mean we have forgotten about the urgent need for sanitary pads but it would simple mean we understand our current great need. I have buried my own family members who lost their lives due to HIV/AIDS, which is the same with everyone else. That is why it is said if you are not infected you are affected and in our case as Swazis we are all affected, considering the fact that HIV/AIDS remains one of the major challenges to Swaziland’s socio-economic development.

If people cannot afford to buy pads (a necessity) how much more buying condoms which in this case are regarded for “optional” use (Sex). The reality is that those who do not afford to buy pads it is because; they literally do not have money, there are other things which are more important than pads and lastly the money that happens to reach their hands is too little to afford both.
A disappointing fact is that if condoms were to be sold, so many people would get infected. I choose not to turn a blind eye on the plenty of people who are accessing them and using them solely because they are provided for free. Again if you would note above, I have put optional in quotes most of the time. This is because it is not everyone who has sex optionally. Our society which is still patriarchal dares women to be defiant, challenge or negotiate sometimes. Something which needs to change ASAP.  

For now like i have stated earlier rather let’s find ways of providing the two without substituting the other. AYOBA