Title: DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
1 DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Presentation to the Joint Monitoring Committee on
the Improvement of the Status of Women - Public Hearings on HIV/AIDS
- 25 September 2001
2Overview
- Gender inequality and HIV/AIDS
- Impact of HIV/AIDS on women
- Response of the Department
- Challenges
3Gender and HIV/AIDS
- Gender inequality
- Increase womens risk of contracting HIV/AIDS
- Limit womens access to resources for coping with
HIV/AIDS - Increase womens share of burden
- HIV/AIDS perpetuates and exacerbates gender
inequality
4Women and Poverty
- Women are more likely to poor
- Studies on poverty in SA show that the poorest
households are usually headed by women - Education opportunities for girls are increasing,
but not commensurate with opportunities for boys - Women in employment are likely to earn less than
their male counterparts
5Violence against women
- Women and girls are more likely to be victims of
domestic violence and sexual abuse than men - Women and girls are more likely to be victims of
rape than men
6Impact of HIV/AIDS on women
- Increased risk of contracting HIV/AIDS
- Reports on other countries suggest higher
infection rates amongst teenage girls and young
women than their male counterparts - Reports suggest that this derives from womens
social and economic status relative to men
7Impact of HIV/AIDS on women
- Infected women are likely to
- Lose jobs if they had them
- Stigmatised as spreaders of HIV/AIDS
- No access to social assistance other than
applying for disability grants for themselves of
Child Support Grant if they have children under 7
years - Unless they have access to food and health care,
their life expectancy is reduced drastically.
Impact extends to their children - Fear of what will happen to their children when
they die
8Impact of HIV/AIDS on women
- Women are expected to be the caregivers
- Disruption of education of girls
- Loss of jobs/reduced earnings
- Grandmothers have to support grandchildren often
on a single social grant
9Departments Response
- Responses attempt to address the immediate needs
of women infected and affected by HIV/AIDS as
well as the broader issue of gender inequality - Responses are mainstreamed in Departments
framework for combating HIV/AIDS - Departments responses are informed by
interactions with affected women and communities
10Departments Response
- Home-Based/Community-Based Care
- Poverty alleviation programmes focused on
HIV/AIDS and economic empowerment of women - Advocacy campaigns and partnerships with Women
(including young women) - Improving access to social assistance
- Victim Empowerment and Domestic Violence
- Training and building capability
- Research and information
11Home-Based and Community-Based Care
- 3 programmes
- Joint projects with Department of Health and
provinces - Projects funded and managed by National
Department using HIV/AIDS funds (5 projects) - National Projects funded from Poverty Relief Fund
17 projects (Provinces also have HIV/AIDS
related projects funded from Poverty Relief Fund)
12Home-Based and Community-Based Care
- Target groups are vulnerable children and women
- Assistance provided to women
- Material assistance (mainly food)
- Counseling and support groups
- Accessing social assistance, welfare services and
poverty alleviation programmes - Home-based care for women and their families
- Information to assist women as caregivers
- Life skills to prevent infection
13Coverage of Joint Projects
Province 2000/2001 2001/2002
Eastern Cape Tsolo District Estimated beneficiaries 50 families and 47 orphans Mhlakulo Butterworth
Free State Welkom District Estimated beneficiaries 210 children and their families/caregivers QwaQwa Sasolburg Odendaalsrus Virginia Theunissen Bultfontein
Gauteng - Alexandra Carleton Sebokeng Bronkspruit/ Cullinan
14Coverage of Joint Projects
Province 2000/2001 2001/2002
KwaZulu-Natal - Ndumu Moyeni Nseleni, Nduduzweni Bhambayi, Khanyeselani Mpendle Portshepstone/Kokstad Pietermaritzburg
Mpumalanga Tonga District 34 projects Estimated beneficiaries2816 children Matibidi Mmamthlake KwaMhlanga Eerstehoek
Northern Cape De Aar Diamond Fields Namaqualand
15Coverage of Joint Projects
Province 2000/2001 2001/2002
Northern Province Maraba Mashashane Westernburg Seshego 1120 children Dwarsloop Acornhoek Dzanani Messina Nylstroom Potgietersrus
North West Jouberton Klerksdorp 115 children Brits Zeerust Vryburg
Western Cape - All regions of Province will be covered
16Poverty Relief Programme
- PRP has targeted women since its inception.
About two-thirds of beneficiaries of Departments
programme are women. - From 1998/99 to 2000/2001
- Managed R363 million in PRP funds
- 2868 projects to value of R329.795 m
- Payments of R289.913 m to projects
17Poverty Relief Programme
- In 2000/2001
- Transferred R9.73 million to HIV/AIDS projects
initiated by communities and Faith-Based
Organisations - Womens Flagship Programme
- Funded from PRP and special allocation for
Flagship Programme - 16 Projects operating (2 per province, except KZN
and Northern Cape) - 801 women and 913 children benefiting
18Poverty Relief Programme
- 2001/02 to 2003/04
- Support income-generation activities for women in
rural areas (100 projects) - Establish 144 rural food production clusters of
100 households each, with emphasis on households
affected by HIV/AIDS - Support 100 community-based projects providing
care and support for households affected by
HIV/AIDS
19Social Assistance
- Women are significant proportion of social
assistance beneficiaries either directly or
through their role as caregivers - Information and communication campaigns to inform
women about social grants, especially Child
Support Grant - Limitations of coverage of grants in context of
HIV/AIDS are being investigated by Committee of
Inquiry into Comprehensive Social Security - Improving administration of social security
20Victim Empowerment
- VEP provides care and support and life skills for
women (and children) who are subjected to abuse - 66 projects at provincial level providing 24hr
one-stop service for women (reach 2500 per month) - 34 National Projects include
- Trained 225 social workers and lay counselors in
Domestic Violence Act - Directory of Services produced
- Survey on shelters for abused women
21Advocacy work Partnerships
- 16 Days of Activism on No violence against
women includes men as partners in combating
violence against women and sharing responsibility
to reduce HIV/AIDS - Working on partnership with LoveLife
- Training girls and boys as groundbreakers to
promote HIV/AIDS awareness - Life skills training
- Involving youth in Home-Based and Community-Based
Care Programmes
22Advocacy work Partnerships
- Partnerships with aid organisations
- Partnership with Faith-Based Organisations
- Already supporting HIV/AIDS projects of FBOs
- Working with FBOs to involve them more
comprehensively in HIV/AIDS programmes
23Building capacity
- Home-Based Care and Poverty Relief Programmes
include building capacity of women - Launched HIV/AIDS Capacity Building Programme for
government officials includes understanding
impact of HIV/AIDS on women - Requests received to extend programme to NGOs and
CBOs
24Information Base
- Started audit/survey of all HBC and CBC projects
in country (with Department of Health) - Survey identifies services offered, target
groups, sources of funding, governance
structures, etc - Survey will be used to scale up response and
identify areas not covered - Survey will serve as basis for monitoring system
25Budget Allocation
Programme Budget Allocation
HBC / Community-Based Care 2000/01 R6.8 million 2001/02 R13.4 million
Poverty Relief Programme 2000/01 R120 million plus R37.678 million roll-over from 1999/2000 2001/02 R50 million. Of this, R10 million is for Flagship type projects R5 million is for community HIV/AIDS support R10.88 million is for food security
Flagship Programme 2000/01 R1.612 million plus R650 000 from Poverty Relief allocation 2001/02 Integrated with PRP
Victim Empowerment 2000/01 R2.3 million 2001/2002 Nil
26Budget Allocation
- Women also benefit through social assistance
- Child Support Grant 1 078 884 beneficiaries at
1 April 2001, paid R117.809 million in 2000/2001 - Aged Pension 1 882 188 beneficiaries at 1 April
2001. Assuming 50 are women, benefits to women
were R522.423 million - Care dependency grant 30 269 beneficiaries at 1
April 2001, paid R18.76 million
27Challenges and Responses
- Addressing the problem of stigma
- Provide tangible assistance to people affected
(access to social grants, counseling, health
care, etc) - Education of communities where HBC and CBC
projects are located - Support to National campaigns
- Young men as partners in fight
- Faith-Based Organisations
28Challenges and Responses
- Scaling up response to meet demand
- Direct more support to community-initiated
projects - Strengthen partnership with FBOs
- Other partnerships with business and labour
- Promoting volunteerism and involvement of youth
29Challenges and Responses
- Ensuring protection of children
- Prioritise orphans and infected children in new
Child Care legislation - National guidelines and protocols to apply to all
HBC and CBC projects funded by government
30Challenges and Responses
- Access to social assistance
- Interim national procedures for dealing with
applications for disability grants and social
relief in distress - Mechanisms to check that participants who are
eligible for social assistance receive grants - Long term options on grants being investigated by
Committee on Social Security
31Challenges and Responses
- Food security
- Strengthen food security component of HBC and CBC
Programme - Integrated Food Security Strategy being developed
by government - Budgetary issues
- Discussions with Treasury on funding for HBC and
increasing social relief budgets - Lack of funding for Victim Empowerment Programme
32Concluding Remarks
- Combating HIV/AIDS and its impact on women
requires us to change the daily reality of many
women - Their access to resources they need to fight
poverty - Their status in society