SWAZILAND: AIDS triggers wave of urban homeless
Source: IRIN
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MBABANE, 24 May 2007 (IRIN) - Disintegration of the
extended Swazi family, partly as a result of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, has created a new phenomenon of urban homelessness. A bitter early-winter cold front awakened Swazis this week to a problem
nonexistent a decade ago: a seemingly permanent population of homeless people in urban centres. Temperatures plunged to almost freezing point in the capital, Mbabane, and dipped below O degrees
Celsius in the northern town, Pigg's Peak and the southern town, Hlatikhulu. Samuel Dlamini, was driven to the streets of the central commercial hub Manzini when family leaders advised him to leave
after his second wife died of an AIDS-related illness. "There was nothing to do there [in the rural homestead]. The drought was such that the fields could not be cultivated, so I came to
Manzini. I lived with other people in the cemetery before they put in a new gate [to deny access]. I slept on cardboard under a plastic sheet, now I sleep on the pavement under newspapers," said
Dlamini. Thandi Ngwenya, a social worker attached to the nongovernmental organisation Baphalali Red Cross Society in Manzini said, "...Dlamini is typical of the urban transients we see, who
have been uprooted from the traditional life on the homestead. Homelessness was unheard of a generation ago, everyone had a home, and a purpose in life". Dlamini said it was more productive to
scrounge through dumpsters he does not ask people for money than sit idle on a dried-up farm. "[At least now]I don't have to contend with my wife's family's hostility". AIDS
has worsened the problem of homelessness by decimating families. Nearly four out of 10 sexually active Swazi adults is HIV positive, a scale of suffering that the extended family is finding trouble
absorbing. For many Swazis during this week of plunging temperatures, the sight of ragged people huddled around fires in alleys was a revelation. "These street people never bother us, only the
children ask for money. I always assumed they had families, a place to go. But it seems they live outdoors all the time," said Alicia Simelane, an Mbabane bank teller. Government's position is
that there are no homeless people in Swaziland, because in this traditional society, everyone has a family homestead, the place of their ancestors, to which they can return. Complex problemSocial
welfare workers said the reality is more complex. "The truth is that poverty has put too much pressure on the traditional family structure. The drought has wasted the fields of subsistence
farmers in all regions of the country this year, and HIV/AIDS is another stress factor," said John Dube, a social science lecturer. "Before independence [in 1968], most Swazis spent their
entire lives within a 50km radius of the family homestead where they were born. Several generations of a polygamous household lived together.I don't think today that a single traditional homestead
like that can be found. The land has been divided and subdivided among children, and the rest have scattered," said Dube. A Manzini shop owner told IRIN, "It seems strange that this is a
quiet and traditional country, but now we have a homeless population like Johannesburg [South Africa's business hub]."









