MELBOURNE,
Australia--Shabana Azmi, acclaimed Indian
film actor, parliamentarian
and social activist, is one of the
many delegates at the Sixth International
Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific.
She took time from her busy schedule
to respond to questions about AIDS
in India, the role she is playing in
raising awareness and what she believes
needs to change politically and socially
to fight the pandemic in India. Excerpts
from an interview:
How
important is the role of celebrities in the fight against
AIDS?
About eight years ago I made a public awareness
film in my own capacity as an actor, going into
a hospital and holding a young HIV infected girl
to show that AIDS was not transmitted through
touch. That was a very well constructed film
and a lot of people had a strong response to
it--I think because it was a celebrity sharing
that message. It was an important step toward
awareness building. But often times because the
message is not thought through, the celebrity
doesn't really convey vital information. You
have to be careful in using celebrities.
This is not to belittle in any way activists
who are really doing genuine work for AIDS awareness
and whose work is little known. This is a dilemma
that I face as a celebrity. I've gone through
a crisis situation where my photograph has become
more important than the message. I wanted to
withdraw, but I realize that it is a process
and I am a part of the process.
What work do you do for social awareness?
It is advocacy. My real work is in the slums.
I work in housing, particularly with the poor.
Now housing is not an issue that can be treated
in isolation. You have to talk about women's
rights, about health issues. My main interests
lie in the area of women's health and reproductive
health.
When diseases like tuberculosis are so much
more prevalent in India, how do you argue for
funding and focus on AIDS?
People do not realize that when a person has
AIDS, other diseases like tuberculosis and malaria
only get exacerbated. They are deeply connected
and cannot be separated. But I think we have
a problem with our health care system because
we have two vertical lines--one which is dealing
with HIV/AIDS and one which is dealing with tuberculosis
so that you have two windows when actually they
must be dealt with together. Official estimates
say that 3.5 million people have HIV/AIDS and
that if there is an increase of 0.01 percent
there will be half a million more cases because
of the sheer numbers involved--if that's not
reason enough to focus on AIDS I don't know what
is.
What is being doing India to fight AIDS?
Funds are being given to awareness programs
and not to actual patients. I think it's ironical
and dichotomous that the funds are going there
and not to actually providing support to infected
people. The fact that CIPLA (an Indian pharmaceutical
company) has been working on cheaper AIDS drugs
is heartening--and legislative support must be
given to them so they can deal with TRIPS (trade
related intellectual property rights) and the
WTO and ensure that it is not disallowed from
providing much cheaper drugs. We are still grappling
with awareness. When you come to a conference
like this you realize that the world has moved
on, the region has moved on. We cannot negate
the fact that in India we're still so low on
awareness that until we build on it we cannot
make all the advances that are necessary.
The Indian education system does not have a
strong sexual health education program. What
do you think?
Well finally we've managed to get the Prime
Minister to make a commitment and say that we
advocate sexual education. But the fact is that
it was not so far in the past that a radio program
on sexual health was banned because it was considered
'immoral.' So we need to have a huge mindset
change, we need to remove the stigma, we need
to talk about issues we normally sweep under
the carpet. And it is of paramount importance
that we give sexual education to adolescents.
I find it strange that with satellite television
available we act coy about this and worry about
the 'evil' effect it can have. We have to create
an enabling atmosphere so that adolescents can
make choices based on the right information.
Does being a Member of Parliament help your
advocacy?
Yes and no. Because I don't think health is
on the agenda of any political party--women's
health even less so. Although all the right noises
are made and token measures taken, the fact is
that the Indian Government has reduced the health
budget. We have a long way to go. The government
cites the human development index and talks about
improving education. We are still talking about
population control, we're not talking about sustainability.
We have to make social investments--in health
and education. We, all of us in society, have
to make health an emotive issue. Ultimately unless
you make things into an emotive issue, nobody's
going to pay any attention, least of all politicians.
How do we, as civil society, work to change
the mindset of people with regards to sexual
health?
I think using every tool that you can. It's
not an either-or situation. You need legislative
measures, you need media advocacy, you need lobbying,
you need to encourage partnerships between NGOs
and the government. Often times there is such
a wide gap between those working at the grassroots
and the government that they're existing in two
different worlds. We have to do whatever we can.
We have to give support to all groups doing really
good work at the grassroots level, and at all
levels.
Women are really affected by AIDS, but the Indian
government still has a strategy to target specific
groups and women are not targeted. How can this
change?
You have to see the lack of empowerment of women
in our society as the root of this problem and
address ways to improve their empowerment. Education,
economic, legislative measures are needed and
we need to change the mindset. The government
doesn't want to hear about empowerment, it's
'too large an issue.' What they have to do is
have an overview and then provide basic things
like primary health care and address it at both
ends. Villagers don't go to health centers because
they don't know when it opens, the auxiliary
nurse has 10 or more villages to tend to and
no transportation- these are management problems,
these can be addressed. So the government has
to start somewhere to begin the process. When
you talk about targeted intervention it's not
the most favorable way of doing it, but you have
to make a start somewhere.
|