It is an area which is isolated from the
rest of the country due to its location.
Access to Lunga District in Luapula
Province is either by boat or by air.
This is because the islands which make up
Lunga are completely surrounded by Lake Bangweulu.
And this isolation has somehow led to a
situation were residents resist change.
People here are against modern ways of
life and even taking pregnant women to a health center for delivery is a big
gamble.
In October, a consortium of civil society
organisations involved in sexual reproductive health issues together with
experts from the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Community Development
camped for a month in Lunga to offer health services.
Among the organisations in the consortium
were Marie Stopes International and Society for Family Health (SFH).
Marie Stopes was in the area to conduct
male circumcisions but only one person showed up and almost all men shunned the
service due to superstitions.
Many people in the area suspect male
circumcision to be satanic or part of a business venture.
“We do not have circumcision in our
culture here. So its foreign. We heir when forskins are cut, they are used to
make sausage and some people have said circumcision is being used by
Satanists,” said Chanda Leo, a local resident.
This rejection of male circumcision was
confirmed even by the civil society organisations who only managed to
circumcise one person who himself came under the cover of darkness to avoid
public shame.
Luapula Member of Parliament Emerine
Kabanshi recently embarked on a difficult task of convincing people in her
constituency to adopt modern sexual reproductive services as opposed to
traditional methods.
Ms Kabanshi toured her constituency to
sensitise people on male circumcision and family planning and she saw for
herself how her motherland is still resisting latest health interventions.
She flew to all the major islands and met
chiefs, pupils and local residents and explained why male circumcision is being
promoted as a way of fighting HIV and AIDS.
Ms Kabanshi talking to Chief Kasoma Lunga about circumcision |
Ms Kabanshi, who is also Community
Development Minister, wore a male circumcision t-shirt during her tour to raise
awareness about the need for men to consider what is commonly referred to as MC.
Her first port of call was the Kasoma
Lunga Catholic Church were she took advantage of mass on a Sunday and ‘evangelised’
to hundreds of congregants over health issues.
Later she visited Chief Bwalya Mponda who
told her there was more need for sensitisation over health issues.
“My people are rejecting male
circumcision because they do not know its benefits. Ba Minister please
intensify the sensitisations so that people can be clear,” he said.
At Bwalya Mponda Primary School, Ms
Kabanshi addressed dozens who pupils who kept murmuring as she spelt out the
importance of male circumcision.
She earlier flew to Kasoma Lunga island
where she launched Sexual And Reproductive Health for All Initiative (SARAI)
which is aimed at encouraging the use of family planning methods by both
teenage and adult mothers.
SARAI is a multi-donor funded project which is reaching to the heart of rural Zambia to help fight bad health traditions and introduce health practices that will save lives.
In Lunga, girls get married as early as
12 years and the use of family planning is not common.
Using what they call Focus Groups, a SARAI team sensitised mothers on the usage of family planning to save the mother’s life
and also space children.
“Our aim is to see to it that mothers
have time to rest after delivering, we want them to also space their children
and reduce deaths,” said Dr Cheswa Vwalika, SARAI Chief of Party.
In one of the focus groups, a teenage
mother explained how she was married at the age of 13 and she immediately used
family planning as she was still young but that ended up bringing problems in
her new marriage.
“After much talk, I told my grandmother
about it and she told me to stop taking family planning. That’s how I started
giving birth. I had five children in seven years before I was divorced,” she
said.
A SARAI-branded vehicle |
In the focus groups, some teenage mothers
revealed that they fear to take family planning because they heard that monthly
periods become severe and some husbands could divorce them for not bearing
children.
SARAI is a five year project which is
being implemented in Luapula, Northern and Muchinga provinces.
Another intervention being used to help
change people’s mindsets is the use of Safe Motherhood Action Groups (SMAG)
which has received overwhelming support from the islands.
40 SMAG members were last month
completing their training in Kasoma Lunga and Nsamba islands on how to
encourage women deliver from health centers as opposed to home deliveries which
mostly result in complications and deaths.
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