Before I proceed I need, as do all VSO Volunteer bloggers it seems, to disclaim VSO’s responsibility for this here blog, so let me this do so paraphrasing the words of a friend; “the views expressed in this blog are the author’s own and do not reflect those of VSO. Indeed they probably won’t reflect mine in 10 minutes, so chill…”
Return to Zanzibar?
Nomakanjani, the vibrant dance/drama group I volunteer with, have been invited to a festival in Zanzibar in February 2011. I’ve been temporarily promoted to be their manager so I can be included in the invitation! Most of the group are in their early 20s and have yet to leave their country, see the sea, travel in a train or boat, let alone experience another country so it would be great if we can go. The problem, of course, is money. Buying passports for most of the 18 people in the group, then getting them to Zanzibar and back is out of our league, so I’ve been trying my hand at ‘resource mobilisation’; trying to persuade the Zambia-Tanzania train company that 18 free tickets is money well spent given the great PR we would give them. They haven’t as yet said no. Keep your fingers crossed.
And another placement
As hinted in my previous entry I’ve recently changed placements (yet again), and now work 4 days a week in a hospice-cum-AIDS clinic. (The fifth day is with Nomakanjani, although it seldom works out that neatly). It became clear that my previous placement didn’t actually need me – maybe they just fancied having a mzungu (white western) volunteer to show off to visitors. So, with commendable haste, VSO moved me to placement number 4 – a hospice in one of the poorer compounds (or ‘peri-urban areas’) of Lusaka. The need for my services there is all too clear.
Due to alleged dodgy dealings in high places some of the big international funders have withdrawn from giving money to health projects, leaving organisations like the hospice in dire straits. Over 3,000 people use its clinics on a regular basis, whilst hundreds of people come for intensive treatment in its 30 beds, or to die pain-free and with dignity. Zambia’s overall adult HIV prevalence rate is around 15%, but this rises to 40% for women aged from 25 – 39 who live in urban areas (such as where the hospice is located). An estimated 89,000 people die as a result of AIDS a year, (dying from ‘opportunistic infections’ such as TB, Gastroenteritis, Meningitis or Malaria), contributing to the 800,000 AIDS orphans, and to an average life expectancy of just 42 years. Many of the services of the hospice will be forced to close if funding is not found, so more resources for me to mobilise, somewhat urgently.
Meanwhile, in not so high places…
The Executive Director of a Zambian NGO, whose raison d’être is to disburse funds to HIV-AIDS organisations (like the Hospice) is currently under investigation. Reportedly the salary she has been paying herself – in full knowledge of the auditors it seems – is pretty much identical to the entire salary costs of the whole hospice. There’s just one of her, and 67 people employed by the hospice.
Fat cats in the developed world who pay themselves over 100 times what their subordinates earn are fairly contemptible in my book, but those that do so in this context – depriving people on the ground of money they need literally to survive, so they can have more cars or bigger swimming pools; well, what can you say?
Website
To finish on a cheerier note, check out a couple of websites. Firstly, Helen and I went to Kafue National Park, a few hours west of Lusaka, last weekend, and saw some lions! You can see photos of them on my Flickr site; http://www.flickr.com/photos/dan_sat/ Secondly, have a look at Nomakanjani’s website; www.nomakanjani.org, designed and implemented by myself and a couple of friends in the UK. We now own a video camera so links to performances online will follow as will, no doubt, appeals for cash to get us to Zanzibar! Look after your resources before I mobilise them in our direction…
Dan
Posted by danandhelen