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Sexworkers target truck drivers, timber loggers in...

Sexworkers target truck drivers, timber loggers in Lupane

Zim Now Writer

Sex work fuelled by truck drivers and timber loggers, could be one of the HIV and Aids key drivers in Lupane, the Matabeleland North provincial capital, the National Aids Council has said.

Matabeleland North has emerged as a transit route for truck drivers, some of whom transport goods across the Sadc region, making several stops in parts of Lupane.

Nac believes their presence attracts sex workers.

NAC Lupane acting District Aids Coordinator Kelvin Tshuma said:

“Our HIV key drivers is that we are a district that is located along the highway, the Bulawayo-Victoria Falls Highway. So, we have a lot of sex work that go on along the highway. We have HIV hotspots, for example Kernmaur. Trucks tend to park there during the night and this is where sex work takes place. Other places are Cross Jotsholo and Gwayi. These are some of the hotspots that we have, truck drivers park and engage in sexual activities,” said Tshuma.

He said they also target timber loggers in the district since Lupane is rich in timber.

Spousal separation, Tshuma said, could be the other factor that fuels HIV infections as couples live separately although he noted that the province is, however, recording a decline in HIV and Aids-related cases.

“Our HIV prevalence rate stands at 10.8 percent according to the 2021 HIV estimates. The incident rate is at 0.2 so we are seeing positive changes. In the last 10 years, we were around over 20 percent but now we are at 10.8 percent which is really positive,” he said.

Tshuma said a decline in HIV cases can be attributed to coordinated efforts that NAC and its partners are implementing.

NAC, he said, markets Pre-exposure prophylaxis and post-exposure prophylaxis for HIV to reduce the risk of new infections.

PrEP pill is given to individuals who are at risk of HIV and they take it up before indulging in sexual activities while PEP is given to someone who would have engaged in sex and risks contracting the virus.

“So what we are doing as the NAC and partners is to continue to socially market all the programmes and strategies for combination HIV prevention that entail correct and consistent condom use. We even provide PEP to those who would have been raped. We are making a clarion call that if ever there is sexual gender-based violence, communities should report as early as possible to ensure that communities have access to post exposure prophylaxis,” he said.

Tshuma called on pregnant women to deliver at health facilities as this reduces the risk of mother-to-child infections.

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