Home / Contact / Stories, News & Reports / Photos

Header

Worldwide  Gay  Life, Sites and Insights
Stories + Photographs + News + Reports + Links


Mauritania News and Reports

Also see:
Behind the Mask LGBT African website
Gay information about Mauritania
Wikipedia information about Mauritania
Commentary from gay Peace Corps Volunteer 2004


1 Mauritania: Fight against AIDS slow to take root in port city of Nouadhibou 4/05

2 AIDS "caravan of hope" travels river valley to break taboos 5/05

3 Mauritanian government, NGOs discuss human rights 7/08



United Nations International Regional Information Network
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46426&SelectRegion=West_Africa

April 1, 2005

1
Mauritania: Fight against AIDS slow to take root in port city of Nouadhibou
(No mention of homosexual contact)


Nouadhibou - Nouadhibou, one of the busiest ports in northwest Africa, in the desert north of Mauritania, is a crossroads for fishermen, mine workers and clandestine migrants heading towards Europe, but efforts to combat AIDS in this melting pot of humanity are still in their infancy.

The government's National Council to Fight AIDS (CNLS) only established a presence in this city of 100,000 people last year and Nouadhibou has yet to open its first AIDS testing centre. Open discussion about AIDS within the town's socially conservative community is difficult. And social taboos against sex outside marriage in Mauritania's staunchly Islamic society mean that condoms are handed out furtively by groups of activists, rather than being sold openly in shops and pharmacies.

But Nouadhibou, situated on the border with Moroccan-ruled Western Sahara, is overflowing with uprooted people and single men and women seeking to improve their fortunes. Even many of those who are married are a long way from their husbands or wives at home and are easily tempted into prostitution or casual affairs.

Local officials reckon that 20 percent of the population consists of migrants from other West African countries, who have got stuck in Nouadhibou while waiting for a fishing boat to take them clandestinely to the Canary Islands or a truck to take them further north across the desert to northern Morocco, from where they could attempt the much shorter sea crossing to mainland Spain.

About 1 percent of the population of Nouadhibou is HIV positive, according to a sentinel survey of pregnant women tested in maternity clinics in 2001. That is low by African standards, but nearly twice the official prevalance figure of 0.57 percent for Mauritania as a whole.

Nonetheless awareness and prevention campaigns are still very limited in scope, according to local AIDS activists. Local people living with AIDS must travel nearly 500 km south to the capital Nouakchott to obtain antiretroviral (ARV) therapy to improve their health and prolong their lives, they noted. And the awareness of AIDS among fishermen, many of whom spend up to 45 days at sea on ocean-going trawlers between trips ashore remains extremely low.

Mauritania may be a huge and sparsely populated desert, but its coastal waters are rich in fish.
Most of the nation's deep-sea fishing fleet is based in Nouadhibou, which is situated in a huge bay protected from northerly and westerly gales and from the huge waves that often roll in from the Atlantic Ocean. But fishing activity comes to a government-imposed halt for two months of the year during the fish breeding season. That is when the fishermen come ashore for a long holiday and are most at risk of catching HIV.

“ We are particularly worried by the upsurge of marriages during the two month-long closed season for fishing in September and October,” explained Abdoulaye Ba, who works for an AIDS control campaign in Nouadhibou run by two non-governmental organisations (NGOs); Adid and the Africa 70 Network. “ There is a boom in weddings during this period, but these tend to be unions between husbands and wives who don’t know each other very well and this obviously presents us with a high-risk situation,” Ba said.

Passing migrants settle down
Formerly known as Port-Etienne in its French colonial past, Nouadhibou is one of the busiest ports in northwest Africa.
The harbour not only hosts a large fishing fleet, it also exports iron ore, brought by train from the mines of Fderik and Zouerat, 600 km inland. The fact that Nouadhibou is within a few days sailing by fishing boat from the Canary Islands attracts many Africans seeking to to make a fresh start in Europe by the back door.

However, the dreams of many of them have faded and they have settled down in Nouadhibou to take jobs in the local fish processing plants and other service industries. Many of the migrants are from countries far to the south and are Christian. They constitute a community apart from the staunchly Muslim Mauritanians, many of whom are fair-skinned and more Arab than black in appearance. “ We have to reach these people and ensure that we do not stigmatise anyone by talking about AIDS,” explained Salamata Sow, the regional delegate of CNLS. “I was able to meet them thanks to the church priest during a mass. He is considered as a leader of public opinion among them and was able to introduce me to the leaders of their community”.

One health worker who prefered to remain anonymous said a recent study showed that the sex workers in Nouadhibou came from more than 10 different countries, including Senegal, Ghana and Morocco and were living in all areas of the town. “ Some came here to find work on the basis of the city’s reputation as an economic dynamo. Others just wait to get on a boat,” explained Djibril Diallo, an AIDS awareness trainer with the organisation SOS Pair Educateur.

There are no cinemas or nightclubs in Nouadhibou, so entertainment once the sun goes down becomes a private matter.
The town has a reputation within Mauritania for loose morals. Humanitarian workers say this is a compelling reason to take solid action against HIV/AIDS there to prevent it from becoming a much bigger problem in the country as a whole.

A rash of billboards on Nouadhibou's sandy streets warning people about the dangers of AIDS shows that an information campaign is already on. Cooperation between the United Nation Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Lutherian World Federation led to an AIDS awareness campaign being conducted among 50 sex workers in Nouadhibou in 2003. The partnership also trained 30 local teachers and held meetings with 63 imams to discuss the dangers of AIDS and ways of controlling the disease.

Fishermen want information
But Sow, the local head of the government campaign against AIDS, said she recently realised that the awareness message was still not reaching the fishermen. “ During our last visit to the port in December, we were bombarded with questions and had to spend six hours answering them instead of the two we had planned,” Sow said. “ Some of them had never heard about AIDS,” she added. Sow pointed out that there was also a need to inform fish sellers and other women working in the port about the pandemic.

Government officials play down suggestions that CNLS has tended to neglect Nouadhibou, despite the town's large number of population groups that are highly vulnerable to AIDS. “ We might have faced some difficulties when we started our project, but Nouadhibou is a priority because of its socio-economical importance, its cosmopolitan population and its particular geographical situation,” said SNLS executive secretary, Doctor Abdallah Ould Horma.

Sow took up her job as the head of CNLS activities in Nouadhibou in October 2004 and the town's first public AIDS testing centre is due to open in September. “ We must face the problem on a long-term basis,” explained Doctor Djahfar Cherfaoui, the chief medical officer of Société nationale industrielle et minière (SNIM), the state-run company which runs the local iron mining industry.

SNIM, which has 1,500 employees, is Nouadhibou's largest employer and a major contributor to Mauritania's export earnings. The company set up a committee to fight AIDS within its labour force in 2002 and has trained 12 percent as peer educators to inform their colleagues about the disease. Free condoms are distributed at the pharmacy of the company hospital, but voluntary testing for AIDS among its employes is still rare. Most of the tests that are performed are simply carried out to confirm cases of AIDS that are already suspected.

Cherfaoui stressed that the SNIM's own efforts had to form part of a wider campaign against AIDS if they were to be successful. “ We will have wasted our time increasing awareness among our 1,500 workers if nothing is done about the other vulnerable population groups in the town, such as the fishermen," he said.

Sow of the CNLS made a special plea for female condoms to be made freely available, especially to Nouadhibou's large community of sex workers. “ We lack feminine condoms which have been requested by the prostitutes," She said. "They prefer to use them rather than male condoms." Male condoms are available, but since it is difficult and embarrassing for most Mauritanians to buy them openly in chemist's shops, a more discreet and informal distritution network has been set up. “Youngsters are ashamed. That’s why I started to supply them with the help of an NGO," said Moustapha, the young manager of an internet café in Nouadhibou. "It is easier for them to come to me.”

Many local AIDS activists are concerned about the imminent opening of a new tarred road linking Nouakchott to Nouadhibou. Its inauguration later this year will complete the final link in a new trans-Sahara highway, running down the West African coast from Tangiers in Morocco to Dakar in Senegal. The new 470 km road will boost trade and economic activity, but also the number of travellers circulating between Mauritania, Morocco and Senegal. Local NGOs and the CNLS are already preparing for the opening of this new transport corridor. They are looking to set up a series of new AIDS awareness campaigns targetted at truckers overland adventurers.



United Nations International Regional Information Network (IRIN)
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47071&SelectRegion=West_Africa
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

12 May 2005

2
AIDS "caravan of hope" travels river valley to break taboos
: The "caravan of hope" educates and entertains audiences on HIV/AIDS

Tiguent, Mauritania - This is a road show with a difference - a West African "caravan of hope" raising awareness about HIV/AIDS through evenings of entertainment that are wowing the crowds in Mauritania.

The mobile state-of-the-art theatre, a truck equipped with a powerful sound system and giant screen, has just ended the first stage of a 2005 HIV/AIDS tour of the Senegal River Valley in southern Mauritania. Nedwa, the Mauritanian organisation that runs the podium-cum-lorry, hopes the tour will trigger dialogue about the pandemic across the Mauritanian countryside and help break down taboos about HIV/AIDS.

At the end of April, the road-show drove into Tiguent, a small town on the road linking Nouakchott, the Mauritanian capital, to Rosso on the southern river border with Senegal. Onboard were 25 people, essentially entertainers from across the region, preparing for the nightfall performance of "Special HIV".

As day broke over the town, a car equipped with a loud speaker cruised the streets to announce the evening show. By evening, a crowd had flocked under the spotlights, sitting on the ground or standing and clapping their hands.

That night, Mauritanian singer Cheikh Ould Elabyad, a look-alike of Algerian pop star Khaled who is popular in Arab-speaking Tiguent, had a star role. The locals already knew his songs "Stop AIDS" and "Protect yourselves against AIDS".

In Tiguent - as well as in other river valley towns such as Mbagne, Rosso, Bogué and Kaedi - the show has attracted big crowds of up to 7,000 spectators an evening. " Our dream has come true," said Jon Shadid, co-founder of the initiative. "We never thought AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases would keep people listening for four hours at a time."

Local Languages to get messages across
The evening schedule in hand, Pape Diallo, who coordinates the entertainers, carefully watches the spectators and reworks the show if necessary according to crowd response. " Every evening, we need to assess the public's reaction to know what will interest them," Diallo explained. "Priorities and interests are different depending on populations. Adaptation is essential to get the message through."

The show uses music, locally-produced short fiction movies, and sketches by entertainers
from SOS Peer Educators of Nouakchott. Sometimes provoking the audience, sometimes gay and sometimes grave, the entertainers explain the transmission and prevention of the virus, go over the taboos and the issue of responsibility, while also tackling sexually transmitted infections.

At times, they might invite a doctor up on stage to reinforce the message, or ask an authority such as the Hakem (county administrative leader) or the mayor to play host to give the evening more weight. Entertainers speak local languages in order to reach their objectives. "Even if we see only one Maur, or one Pulaar, we should talk to him. Therefore we summarise the message in his language," said Soya Watt, one of the educators on the caravan.

Raising awareness is the best method of prevention
Built in Cote d'Ivoire, the podium-cum-lorry arrived in Mauritania in 2003 and was sent travelling inland last year. This year it plans to visit three more regions and stage 54 shows compared with 36 on the previous tour.
Three new short movies have been produced and 200,000 basic information folders are to be distributed to the public during the 2005 tour.

Funded by the US organisation World Vision, the lorry is run by Nedwa while the inland tour and the project has financial support from the national secretariat of the fight against AIDS (SENLS), World Vision, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), and other local partners. " We select a geographical area, like this tour on the river valley," explained Gibril Sy, president of SOS Peer Educators, the association that trained the entertainers. "It allows us to travel with the same team for two weeks to harmonise messages."

In Mbagne, on the banks of the Senegal River, the Pulaar singer Mousa Sarr, clad in yellow, performed songs against AIDS. He knew the local customs and the right words to touch people as he is from Kaedi, just a few kilometres from the fishing village. " Once we feel that the public has understood, we as entertainers get hotter," said Aminata Ly, one of the performers. "If we hear people talk about AIDS the next morning, that's satisfying. That's positive feedback."

Mauritania's HIV prevalence rate is officially estimated at 0.6 percent, but according to many humanitarian organisations it could be much higher in this country where few statistics are available. " Mauritanians often have many sexual partners and if we do nothing, HIV prevalence will explode in the country," Shadid insisted. "The best prevention is raising awareness."

Fostering dialogue between generational groups

Breaking taboos is another aim of the road show. " We're obliged to centre our message around abstinence, fidelity or the unreliability of your partner, depending on the public," said Ly. "We've been accused of inciting people to indulge in sexual promiscuity simply because we advocated condom use." " We talk about it as one last resort," Diallo, the coordinator of the caravan, explained.

In Mbagne for instance, the public is very conservative and "you need to be able to talk to all generations at the same time and incite them to exchange views," caravan educator Watt explained. Condom use, for example, remains a touchy issue. "Instead of talking about condoms, we choose to show its use on film with two young people who intend to have sex for example," one of the entertainers said. Abdulaye Ndiagne, a college boy who attended the show in Mbagne, said such subjects were taboo in the region. "In Halpulaar society, I can't even talk in front the elders, left alone discuss sexuality."

" Many youngsters don't know how to use condoms," Ndiagne added. "They tear the wrapping package with their teeth or don't look at the expiry date." Distributing condoms is not part of this trip. "We can't plan to distribute condoms in public," Sy explained. "However, we're trying to set up a network of relays and peer educators in every town for a more efficient distribution."

The absence of medical staff on the caravan is a deliberate choice, according to entertainers. " It's important that trained communicators deliver the message," Watt said. "To conceive sketches about AIDS is not a doctor's job. He may not find the right words to make people laugh."
[ENDS]



magharebia.com
http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2008/07/21/newsbrief-08

2008 July 21

3
Mauritanian government, NGOs discuss human rights

A training workshop opened on Sunday (July 20th) in Nouakchott to focus on the dialogue between human rights organisations and Mauritanian authorities, PANA reported. As part of the democratic process, a National Commission of Human Rights was established in Mauritania in 2006.