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 Friday 04 September 2009
 
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SOUTH AFRICA: Lovers, fathers and brothers


Photo: USAID
The 'Brothers for Life' campaign is aimed at men
JOHANNESBURG, 26 August 2009 (PlusNews) - The days of South African men waiting at the kerbside while girlfriends and wives queue at the clinic for antenatal visits are gone; a new programme aims to create a new idea of what makes a man, and turn the tables on the old one.

Starting on 29 August the "Brothers for Life" campaign hopes to make men in their 30s more responsible for their health and their partners' by looking seriously at issues like multiple concurrent partnerships, low HIV testing rates and generally poor health-seeking behaviour - from a man's perspective.

South Africa's national HIV prevalence rate is about 11 percent, but men aged 25 to 49 have an infection rate of about 24 percent - more than double the average according to the results of the third national HIV survey by Human Sciences Research Council, released in June.

The Johns Hopkins Health and Education in South Africa has partnered with USAID and Sonke Gender Justice, which works to address social aspects of the HIV epidemic, with a particular focus on gender, in spearheading the project.

The issues may not be new, but the organizers hope the high-profile campaign's novel approach will break through to what has been a neglected population in the country's fight against HIV/AIDS, said Bafana Khumalo, co-director of Sonke Gender Justice.

Many of the largest HIV prevention programmes, such as Soul City and LoveLife, target teenagers and youth, despite the real need for HIV prevention amongst this high-risk group, Khumalo said.

The statistics on men's roles in everything from condom use to rape, while important, may have overshadowed the reality of some South African men, said Richard Delate, country programme director of Johns Hopkins Health and Education in South Africa.

"We know that the majority of men have one partner, we know the majority of men use condoms, and that the majority of men do not consume alcohol in excessive amounts," Delate told IRIN/PlusNews. "Brothers for Life is aiming to create a movement of men around the real values that underpin South African men."

The problem is that these men often do not admit to being the "good guy" said Nhlanhla Vezi, a facilitator at The Valley Trust, a health NGO based in KwaZulu-Natal and one of more than 30 NGOs implementing the Brothers for Life project. "A man may lie and say he has three girlfriends but, in reality, he might have no partner at all."

Sex between older men and younger women is indicated as a primary driver of the high HIV prevalence rates, but Delate said men who signed up for the "Brothers for Life" movement might dent the rate of new infections as men adopt safer sex practices, and start talking about them.

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From community hero to campaign pin-up

The campaign goes beyond the bedroom, encouraging men to take an active and early role in parenting, starting with their participation in prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) services to their partners. Vezi said the men he worked with were excited about a programme that did more than stereotype them as violent and irresponsible.

"Men always say, 'We want to be trained in term of issues of PMTCT and to understand partners.' They say there is too much criticism from women saying they don't participate," he said. "Men are saying, 'We don't know how to help you, we can only drive to the clinic and wait in the car while you stand in line.'"

The ladies have already had their say in the campaign's mass media component, nominating many of the men featured in the posters and TV adverts.

Creative Director Xolisa Dyeshana was part of the team at Joe Public, the South African advertising firm that produced the campaign's slick upmarket look. Rather than using actors or models in TV adverts and billboards, the team opted to use men that women said embodied the campaign's ethos of responsibility and wellness.

"We went into different communities and introduced the concept to women, and asked them to nominate men they felt represented these values," Dyeshana told IRIN/PlusNews.

"There was no wardrobe, no make-up. The guy you see in the PMTCT ad - that's really his partner and they're really expecting a child," he said. "We're trying to create a new social norm."

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Theme(s): (PLUSNEWS) Care/Treatment - PlusNews, (PLUSNEWS) Gender Issues, (PLUSNEWS) HIV/AIDS (PlusNews), (PLUSNEWS) Media - PlusNews, (PLUSNEWS) Prevention - PlusNews

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[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.