Guest guest Posted July 25, 2001 Report Share Posted July 25, 2001 12-7-2001 From: Maitreya & Dr Jayasree A.K To Sri. A.K. Antony Chief Minister State of Kerala Sir, We are doing Sexual Health Intervention (ISH) Projects among different sections of the society under the State AIDS Control Society, which is an offshoot of the Ministry of Health. As talking about sexual health is a taboo in the society, the Government faced a dilemma on the wake of the onslaught of AIDS. The PHCs and CHCs are ill equipped to handle this situation. Moreover international aid started to pour in to contain the epidemic. Immediate action was necessary to avail it. In that scenario, the Ministry of Health chalked out a plan to engage the NGOs working in the sexual health area to start projects under it. Back in 1996, we are among the very few NGOs who were ready to do it. Now more than forty projects are working in the state. After four years of hectic experience in the intervention projects, we are facing an impasse in our activities. To cut through it we need first, a patient hearing from you, then, an intervention with an understanding. Otherwise, the sustainability of the projects and the level of achievements gained by them will go down the drain. We could definitely boast about the arrest of growth and containment of AIDS in Kerala. The level of awareness among the general public is at par with the international standards. So the necessity of intervening positively at this juncture is the need of the hour. These are some of the areas you have to look into: Z The interventions are targeted among the high-risk groups, especially sex workers and sexual minorities including gay community (MSM). These two communities have responded to the challenge with vigor and enthusiasm. They are the most neglected and stigmatized groups. The sex workers are considered as criminals and gay activities are illegal in the eye of the law. During the first years they expected some changes in their lot but to their surprise, the projects aimed only at the prevention of AIDS, and not their well-being, which means they should not die of AIDS but can die by any other disease or torture. Though we talk a lot of enabling environment, sustainability and delegation of project management to the primary stakeholders, the attitude of the arms of Government, especially Police and Judiciary is worse than ever. The sex workers are arrested daily and punished with imprisonment. The gay community is hounded out and is detained in the lockups. If this situation is to continue the projects started among them is bound to fail. To fight the human rights violations the sex workers formed an organization but this did not help them from being arrested. The NGOs took up their case and complained to the State and National Women's Commission, State and National Human Rights Commission, Law Commission, Chief Justice of Kerala and the concerned authorities at all levels. But all fell into deaf ears. Already these two communities are losing interest in the activities of the projects because of this neglect and apathy from the side of authorities. Moreover, sexual health is a touchy subject, members of one NGO, SAHAYOG, were arrested and detained in prison for printing sex education materials in Utharanchal and recently the members of another NGO were arrested allegedly running a gay club in Lucknow. If it is going to be this risky the NGOs involved will quit the efforts. It is by wooing and coaxing by the concerned authorities the reluctant NGOs are brought into the scenario. If the Home Department and Health Department, under you, can't come together and start a meaningful dialogue and develop a strategy to cross over the difficulty, we, the people of Kerala, are going to face the music. If the Government is going to hide behind moral double standards for the sake of votes, not many will be left to vote in the coming elections. The Health Department, Police, Judiciary and the concerned NGOs should sit together and workout a successful strategy without any delay. Z As there is no cure or vaccine to control AIDS the only strategy developed is the practice of safe sex. This primarily means the use of condoms. In the initial years the distribution of free condoms by the project staff was an integral part of the project. In fact the rising number of distributed condoms and ensuring its use were taken as the criterion to assess the success of the project. Later introducing social marketing, which means to supply condoms with reduced rate, played down this part. That was okay as it was a good strategy to sustain the habit of using condoms. But recently the project staffs were asked to get the condoms from the PHCs, which supply the brand 'Nirodh'. 'Nirodh' is the official brand of the Government, which is mandatory to be supplied by all the condom manufacturers. But that brand has an ill reputation among the public as 'substandard'. So asking the NGOs to supply the condoms rejected already by the public is a useless activity. As the core of the projects is the use of condom, if we fail in this activity, millions of rupees are wasted and the epidemic will get out of control. So please take initiative to supply other brands of condoms to the project to be distributed to the public. We know that all brands of condoms are safe and good and it is only the popular perception that 'Nirodh' is not good; we are not suggesting supplying highly priced condoms. But, if consensus can be arrived that the self same condoms can be wrapped in glossy and attractive covers, it can help to attract the users again. This can be done without incurring much cost difference. Z The NGOs are called project partners and in the initial years we did feel like partners. In fact a partners forum called PFK was formed at the out set of the projects. But now that forum is non-functional. The forum lost its vigor as the donor agency DFID entrusted the running of the projects to the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO). But now we are being transformed into mini governmental departments. The voluntary nature of the NGOs and its flexibility are undermined by strict control, just because Government funds them. It is not that we are against control, monitoring and auditing but there is now four types of auditing, which is a waste by itself. If this number of auditing could curb corruption, we wonder how the government bodies remain corrupted top to bottom. In fact the monitoring and auditing neither did not prevent corruption nor did it allow the government bodies to act with freedom and intelligence. This causes undue delay in sanctioning projects and the free flow of funds at the proper time. If the Government bodies are good, why in the first place the NGOs are necessitated? Everyone knows that in most of the PHCs the condoms are buried in the earth to show stipulated quotas to be distributed. Moreover the PHC staff could not be moved to face such an emergency, as they are ill equipped in knowledge and flexibility and they will resist any movement to make them do things which they don't like with their unions. This situation necessitated the active participation of the NGOs. We, NGOs, work with trust and voluntary spirit. If you kill it by this kind of control, the NGOs won't remain as NGOs but sub departments of Government, as inefficient as Government Secretariat. If it is to check paper organisation not to siphon off the funds, the government could check the history of the organisation in the initial stage itself. If the Government departments are not corrupt then only you could check false organizations. Now the concerned authorities interfere with the internal affairs of the NGOs and controls, threatens just like police. In the course it hampers the smooth functioning and cause much delay in the execution of the project. If things are going to remain this way, the active and trustworthy NGOs will leave the projects and what you fear, the coming of paper organizations will happen. In fact, the Government staff itself will take the initiative to form their own organisations instead, as has happened in every other field, for example, the irrigation, and electricity departments. The coalition of corrupt officials, paper organizations can transcend all auditing and scrutiny. Learn to trust the NGOs to keep them active and flexible. Z Recently, the authorities brought a new rule that the NGOs should contribute 10% to the project fund. The spirit of the rule is to ensure that the NGOs should do their part. This is another idiocy. Being an NGO means doing work voluntarily. How can anyone instill voluntarism by making a rule? Lot of work has to be done for the smooth functioning of the projects, which never can be accounted. Who will value those? Here again we can see that the whole procedure is initiated from the lack of trust. By the rule you are forcing an NGO to write false documents to raise the money from the project itself. What I am trying to convey, Dear Chief Minister, is that these rules to check and monitor the trustworthiness of the NGO is making it more false, inflexible, incompetent and on the long run useless. After the demise of the socialist block, all over the world the role of the NGO grew into a different level. The United Nations singled out the participation of the NGOs and promoted it into its developmental activities. The case being this, the role of the NGO will increase in the coming years. So, if for future programmes, NGO co-operation is a necessary component, the government authorities should learn that trust is the key. They should ensure that the autonomy, flexibility and efficiency of the organization are kept. They should learn to respect the NGOs. Z As the AIDS Control Society directly handles the projects, the existing system of PHCs and CHCs are not involved and sometimes are at loggerheads with the projects. So there should be a co-ordination in their activities and integration is necessary. The Government arm won't be able to do the job, so the NGOs are a necessary component. But this situation is not well understood. The NGOs are called partners but handled as secondary citizens. The Director of Health Services, DMOs, Doctors of the District Hospitals and the NGOs should act together to co-ordinate their work. District level meetings of all these sections should be called with immediate effect to smoothen out the differences. We request you to take the initiative to call a meeting of the concerned officials and NGOs in the immediate future to sort out the above and allied problems to fight the scourge of AIDS in our state. In good spirit and love Maitreya & Dr Jayasree jayasree@... ________________________________________ Copies to: Minister of Health; Secretary of Health; Principal Secretary of Health; DHS; SAPO; SMA; PFK; DGP; Chief Justice of Kerala; SHRC; NHRC; SCW; NCW; NACO; Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, India; DFID and Media _____________________________________________ Cross posting from: aabinand _____________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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