blinkx
  • ZAMBIA: A woman in Zambia has become the first journalist to publicly declare her HIV status

  • 00:00:22
  • ITN Source
    • Browse

ZAMBIA: A woman in Zambia has become the first journalist to publicly declare her HIV status

As part of efforts to fight the stigma associated with HIV/AIDS in Zambia, Mildred Mpundu has become the first journalist to publicly declare her HIV positive status. About 1 million of Zambia's 12 million people are living with the virus. In a move that is unprecedented among journalists in Zambia, Mildred Mpundu recently decided to tell the world about her HIV positive status. Mpundu has won national praise for her moving accounts of how she contracted the disease. Since discovering her status and subsequent illness, Mpundu has resigned from her feature writing job for the 'Times' newspaper. Zambia's former president and founding father, Kenneth Kaunda, lauded her efforts to fight the stigma associated with HIV/AIDS during a visit to Mpundu's home with a group of Zambian journalists. "It's good particularly for the young journalists, female journalists and the young male journalists who are doing this profession to have self control. Trust in God, believe in God, God will keep you and if he has to give you a woman he'll give you a woman, if he has to give you a man, he'll give you a man," said Mpundu. Zambia has a population of about 12 million people. The United Nations estimates that about one million of them are living with the HIV virus. "There are many who are afraid of coming out. There are many who wouldn't want to say their parents have died of AIDS. They would like to say something else. But what you have done is wonderful for Zambia, Africa, for the rest of mankind, wherever AIDS is a problem", said Dr. Kaunda Dr. Kaunda was speaking in his capacity as the chairman of the Kenneth Kaunda Children's Foundation which is actively involved in fighting HIV/AIDS in Zambia and around the continent. Cassius Mbewe, who hosts a radio show for Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation (ZNBC), reads the newspaper headlines to his listeners each morning. He read out Mpundu's story when it hit the headlines. Mbewe is keen to see more journalists following her example. "This is important in that because as journalist we are the people that the other masses out there look up to and if we come out in the open and make sure that we talk about HIV and AIDS and we actually make mention of our status, it's going to help a lot of people out there because we are looked at as role models", says Mbewe. Apart from the problem of stigma, Zambia is also struggling to cope with about 710,000 AIDS orphans.

ITN Source | August 4, 2007Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .read. .each. .sure. .models. .actually











Accounts   Actively   Actually   Afraid   Africa   Aids   Among   Apart   Associated   Capacity   Cassius   Chairman   Continent   Contracted   Control   Cope   Decided   Declare   Died   Discovering   Disease   Done   Each   Efforts   Else   Estimates   Example   Father   Female   Foundation   Headlines   Hell   Hiv   Illness   Involved   Journalists   Keen   Kenneth   Lauded   Male   Mankind   Masses   Mention   Mildred   Million   Models   Newspaper   Orphans   Parents   Particularly   Population   Positive   Praise   Profession   Read   Resigned   Rest   Role   Self   Status   Stigma   Struggling   Subsequent   Sure   Trust   Unprecedented   Virus   Wherever   Won   Wonderful   Wouldnt   Writing   Zambian   Zambias