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Virginity Testing and the War against AIDS
12 August, 2005 - By Kathambi Kinoti - AWID
A look at the implications of adopting virginity testing as a tool in preventing HIV transmission

Placing a Premium on Virginity

Many cultures in the past placed a premium on the virginity of girls and young women before marriage. Several still do, and in some places where the practice had declined there has been a return to so-called virginity testing to determine whether a girl has ever had sexual intercourse. In South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal Province, and in the neighbouring kingdom of Swaziland, girls are routinely inspected to check if they are virgins. The reason for the practice, it is said, is to 'preserve beauty, pride and a valuable asset of the nation. Women are regarded as flowers of any nation and each nation has its specific features and perceptions of what value is.'[1]

Linking Virginity to HIV/AIDS Prevention

Virginity testing is now being touted as one method to check the onslaught of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, presumably to encourage abstinence, which is one of the ABCs of preventing the spread of the virus. One of the advocates of virginity tests is South Africa's immediate former Deputy President Jacob Zuma who, while still in office, was reported as having encouraged girls to take the tests as a way of curbing the spread of HIV/AIDS and reducing the prevalence of early pregnancies. Mr Zuma referred to virginity as a girl's 'family's treasure,' saying that traditionally girls 'would only have sex when permitted to do so by their families after marriage.'[2] In Uganda, one Member of Parliament organizes bursaries to enable needy girls to university, provided that they pass a virginity test. He links virginity tests to the prevention of exposure to AIDS. [3]

The South African Parliament in June 2005 passed a Bill to prohibit virginity testing. This drew fierce opposition from proponents of the custom. Zulu king Goodwill Zwelithini protested that he was not consulted by the government before the law was enacted, and his supporters are reported to have vowed to defy the ban on this age-old tradition. [4] Many of the girls who undergo the inspection say that they are doing so of their own volition and in exercise of their right to practise their culture and traditions. On the other hand, human rights advocates say the tests are ''discriminatory, invasive of privacy, unfair, impinging on the dignity of young girls and unconstitutional.''[5] The debate brings into focus the sharp clash between the right to practise culture and other human rights of bodily integrity and equality as well as sexuality rights.


Are Virginity Tests an effective Weapon in the War against AIDS?

Virginity tests are unlikely to prove a realistic or useful HIV/AIDS prevention method, and may even be an obstacle for several reasons:



South Africa has one of the highest HIV infection rates in the world, and its leaders have been criticised for burying their heads in the sand about the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and for suggesting doubtful ways of tackling the virus, instead of tried and proven methods of preventing transmission. The South African government's official stance is against virginity testing, but it remains to be seen whether the ban will really be effective in preventing the practice given that the tests have received strong support from some of the country's leaders and are gaining in popularity.

Notes
1. Report on Consultative Conference on Virginity Testing held in South Africa on June 12, 2000 by South Africa Commission for Gender Equality and the South Africa Human Rights Commission. 2. See http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/3683210.stm 3. See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/4700171.stm. 4. See http://www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp?ReportID=5052 5. Teboho Maitse, a member of the South African Commission on Gender Equality quoted in 'Ban on virginity testing raises ire of Zulus.' Ibid. 6. See http://www.aegis.com/news/lt/1999/LT990702.html 7. See http://lynx.dac.neu.edu/k/kakelly/virgins/virgins.html




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