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Africa

Ageing Gambians race for justice over ex-leader’s fake AIDS cure

Reuters Africa
Last updated: January 25, 2018 1:36 pm
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Reuters Africa
January 25, 2018
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7 Min Read
Survivors of Yahya Jammeh's AIDS treatment programme Lamin Ceesay, Fatou Jatta and Ousman Sowe (left to right) pose for a photo in Banjul, Gambia, January 18, 2018. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Nellie Peyton
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BANJUL – The president had found a cure for AIDS. That was the news that reached Ousman Sowe, the head of a Gambian AIDS support network, one day in 2007. He was overjoyed.

Survivors of Yahya Jammeh’s AIDS treatment programme Lamin Ceesay, Fatou Jatta and Ousman Sowe (left to right) pose for a photo in Banjul, Gambia, January 18, 2018. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Nellie Peyton
“We all went with the hope that we were going to take a drop of some wonderful medication and be cured,” Sowe, 64, a tall man with greying hair, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an office outside Gambia’s rundown seaside capital.

But he was not allowed to go home after showing up at the state house that day. Gambia’s ex-president Yahya Jammeh forced him to drink herbal concoctions morning and night for seven months until he was declared cured – but in reality, near death.

Jammeh, whose 22-year rule over the tiny West African country was marked by accusations of human rights abuses, fled into exile last year after losing an election.

Now survivors of Jammeh’s bogus AIDS treatment are doing what once seemed impossible – speaking out about their suffering and pursuing justice against the man who endangered their lives.

An estimated 9,000 Gambians, most with HIV, passed through Jammeh’s treatment programmes and were forced to give up conventional medicine in favour of his homemade cures, said AIDS-Free World, a U.S.-based charity working with survivors.

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The fake AIDS treatment not only had grave health consequences for the patients, some of whom died, but hindered real HIV/AIDS prevention efforts in the country, UNAIDS said.

“There was sort of a blackout of information on HIV, because everything was related to the president’s treatment,” said the U.N. agency’s country director Sirra Ndow.

“There was the perception that if there was a cure, you didn’t need support.”

Although HIV death rates are falling and treatment rates rising globally, Gambia is trailing.

Its infection rate – of about two percent – is much lower than many African countries. But only 30 percent of Gambians with HIV were on antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) in 2016, while the target is 90 percent by 2020, according to UNAIDS.

THE GLASS HOUSE
Sowe and two other outspoken survivors, Fatou Jatta and Lamin Ceesay, are working with lawyers and activists to gather evidence against Jammeh.

But all three are in their 50s or 60s and struggling with poor health, discrimination and poverty.

“We believe they should be compensated, but time is really against us,” said Agasha Tabaro, a legal fellow with AIDS-Free World. “This is a health issue, and it’s urgent.”

The patients never knew what Jammeh was feeding them.

Sometimes it came in a bottle, sometimes powdered, sometimes mixed with canned milk or honey. If they sipped the concoctions, he would yell, forcing them to drink it all at once, they said.

“I would vomit every time,” said Jatta, 51, a social worker who spent nine months in the programme after publicly disclosing that she had HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Every day, Jammeh’s patients were taken to a glass building in the state house complex where the president administered the treatment, they said. They were not allowed to contact their families, or allowed to opt out.

Sometimes the president would rub ointments on their bodies. The sessions were filmed and broadcast on state television.

“The psychological effect on me was such that after the programme I felt it very difficult to integrate again into society,” said Sowe.

Severely weakened by Jammeh’s treatment, Sowe and Ceesay went back on ARVs after Jammeh discharged them, and Jatta started taking them. Ceesay’s wife, also in the programme, died.

After Jammeh’s treatment programme, survivors lost their jobs and struggled to feed their families, they said. They could not escape the fact that their faces had been broadcast on TV.

“I think their dignity needs to be restored,” said Ndow.

Ceesay, who was the first man in Gambia to openly declare his status, said he has been forced to move houses frequently because landlords evict him when they find out he has HIV.

“I want my own home for my family,” he said. “That’s what I‘m struggling with now.”

FIGHT FOR JUSTICE
The survivors know that bringing Jammeh to justice may be a far-flung hope. He fled to Equatorial Guinea and it is unclear whether President Teodoro Obiang would extradite him.

A truth and reconciliation commission is expected to start work in Gambia later this year.

“It’s not going to be easy to get Jammeh to trial, but it can certainly be done,” said Reed Brody, a U.S. lawyer steering the campaign for victims of alleged rights abuses under Jammeh.

“As the victims tell their stories and more and more information comes out, the demand for justice could become overwhelming,” he said.

Brody, nicknamed the “dictator hunter”, helped victims of Chad’s Hissene Habre jail their former president for life last year for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

But it was a 17-year battle.

“Even if the compensation comes when we are not here, it will be for our children,” Jatta said.

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