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SOUTH AFRICA: Gender Loses Out in Basic Education Crisis
By Ann Hellman
CAPE TOWN - With the 15th-year review of the 1995 Beijing World Conference on Women taking place at the ongoing Commission on the Status of Women in New York, South African teachers and education experts say they fear that a special focus on the advancement of girls is getting lost amidst the growing levels of poverty in the country.
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HEALTH-SOUTH AFRICA: Five Years to Children Born Free of HIV
By Marshall Patsanza
JOHANNESBURG - A world where all children are born free of HIV infection is possible in only five years if donors continue to fund global efforts to combat the virus.
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SWAZILAND: Long-distance Learning Certificate for Caregivers
By Mantoe Phakathi
MBABANE - Every Tuesday you will find 70-year-old Precious Dlamini under a tree, weighing children and babies from her local community as she monitors their health and nutrition.
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SOUTH AFRICA: Increase in Social Grants Will Benefit Children
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN - South Africa’s children, the country’s most vulnerable population group, will benefit through the increase in social grants recently outlined in the national budget.
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RWANDA: Efforts to Contain HIV/AIDS Among Teens Slacken
By Aimable Twahirwa
KIGALI - Eighteen-year-old David Kimenyi* is sure he infected his girlfriend with HIV. They had unprotected sex many times, even after he discovered he was HIV-positive.
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SWAZILAND: Dating in a Time of HIV
By Mantoe Phakathi
MBABANE - Jabulile Dlamini* is sweet sixteen and has never been kissed. And she is not expecting to be kissed any time soon or to even receive any gifts this Valentine’s Day.
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UGANDA: Early Diagnosis of HIV Still Elusive
By Evelyn Matsamura Kiapi
KAMPALA - HIV-positive Justine Kirumira* is a mother torn between doing what is right for her daughters and her own fear of HIV/AIDS. She suspects that her eight and 12-year-old daughters may also have the virus. But she may never know the truth of their status because she refuses have them tested.
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ZIMBABWE: Training Teachers to Cope with HIV-positive Students
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - Eleven-year-old Memory’s grandmother wanted her to drop out of school because she is not going to live long enough to complete her studies. And the ridicule and stigma Memory endures at school because of her HIV status does not make her education seem worthwhile. Especially since this ridicule comes from her teacher.
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EAST AFRICA: No Laws to Fight HIV Stigma in Schools
By Evelyn Matsamura Kiapi
ARUSHA - Although he was born with the virus, it was only 15 years after his birth that Robert* and his family discovered he was HIV-positive.
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HEALTH: Raising the Recommended CD4 Count for ART
By Nastasya Tay
PRETORIA - Newborn babies in South Africa will now be treated for HIV, regardless of their CD4 count. President Jacob Zuma announced several new measures which focus on expanding the country’s anti-retroviral (ARV) programme, especially in terms of mother-to-child-transmission, and for those with both TB and HIV.
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HEALTH-ZIMBABWE: Lots of Drugs, No Takers
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - Martha* knows that her two young sisters and her need medicine. She also knows where to get it – a clinic a few yards away from her home in Glen Norah, a high-density suburb in the Zimbabwean capital.
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WORLD AIDS DAY: Herdboys at Risk to Contract HIV
By Letuka Mahe
MASERU - In the scorching heat of the midday summer sun, a teenage boy’s sharp voice can be heard vividly as he continuously summons his cattle. Glad in his shabby-looking rag that used to be a blanket and black gumboots, the only thing that occupies his mind is his herd, his everyday companions, nothing else.
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WORLD AIDS DAY: Growing Up with HIV
By Zarina Geloo
LUSAKA - Sixteen-year-old Andela Milambo* wants a husband. She is not looking for love, but for someone to share the burden of living with HIV. She wants to be able to take her medicine without having to hide, to discuss the recurring herpes with someone who understands.
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Farming the future: sustaining smallholder farmers in RSSSub-Saharan Africa continues to register high levels of HIV prevalence. By focusing on the most vulnerable and marginalized ­ children ­ who remain largely invisible in the epidemic, “Children on the Frontline” seeks to ensure that it can help shape policies and inform Africa’s leadership on the specific needs and issues facing children effected and affected by HIV/AIDS. IPS Africa reporters in East and Southern Africa will seek to humanize the impact of the pandemic, demonstrate the challenges and highlight the types of solutions that can contribute to improving children’s lives by focusing on:
• Prevention of mother to child transmission
• Providing paediatric treatment and care
• Preventing infection among adolescents and young people
• Protection and care for children affected by AIDS

Samantha Smit spends a day with an HIV positive teenager, Sesi, who says she hates taking ARVs.
PMTC is yet to gain a foothold in Uganda. Wambi Michael reports.
In Women's Words --  Zooming In on Children Infected and Affected by HIV/AIDS

Ethical guidelines for Journalists
UNICEF - Children and HIV and AIDS

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