Loading...
Albinos also Victims of Discrimination in Africa
Moyiga Nduru - IPS
Albinism is characterised by the absence of melanin in skin, eyes and hair and can affect all races.
5 July 06 - JOHANNESBURG - Albinos are shunned and discriminated against in South Africa and elsewhere in Africa where their white skin and snowy hair is seen as abnormal.

Albinism is an inherited genetic condition characterised by the absence of melanin in skin, eyes and hair and can affect all races.

"Traditionally it’s a taboo or a curse to give birth to an albino. Some people believe that having an albino is the result of bewitchment in a family," said John Makumbe, professor of political science at the University of Zimbabwe, and president of the Zimbabwe Albino Association — a non-governmental organisation (NGO) based in the capital, Harare. He puts the number of people with albinism in his country at about 14,000.

Suspicion about inter-racial relationships may also come into play. "I was nearly killed at birth. The midwife thought my mother was misbehaving with some white missionaries around our area," Makumbe told IPS.

"Many times people refer to me as a white person. Initially it was a form of insult; now it has become a joke. Some of my friends say ’You white man, have you got a farm? We want to invade it’," he said, in reference to the farm occupations that began in Zimbabwe in 2000, ostensibly to correct racial imbalances in land ownership that dated back to the colonial era.

Africa apparently has a higher prevalence of people born with albinism with about one per 4,000 to 5,000 persons compared to a country like Denmark, with one in 60,000.

More albinos are in Africa

Lorato Moswane, a South African accountant with albinism, chuckles when asked whether people view her as a white person. "I don’t know," she told IPS, in the commercial centre of Johannesburg. "But whenever I walk around places people look at me curiously."

"About 96 percent of people with albinism have eye problems. They can either be short or long sighted," Arnold Christianson, a professor of human genetics at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, told IPS.

Noted Mtshazo, "Short sightedness…reduces speed in terms of typing and writing. For example, I need more time to type and write than a person without albinism."

"In school I had always to sit in front because of my eyesight, and because of my slow response to reading and writing I never finished exams," he told IPS. "In those days, there was no extra time (to compensate for eye problems). A few universities now allow for extra time…when requested."

But, while ways of dealing with poor vision can be found in the classroom, a test for a driver’s licence offers less room to manoeuvre. "Even with spectacles most of us can’t pass the eye test for driving, (but) most employers prefer people with a driver’s licence," observed Mtshazo.

Their lack of melanin means albinos cannot do jobs which entail lengthy exposure to the sun. Melanin "protects the skin (and) the back of the eye, called the retina, from the harmful effects of ultraviolet light. Without melanin, the sun burns the eyes and the skin very easily," said Christianson.

greater risk of skin cancer

"You develop blisters when you stand in the sun; always you have to work under shelter," said Mtshazo. As a result, "You can’t work in construction…because your body doesn’t contain the pigment to protect you against the sun."

Faced with such challenges, various NGOs for people with albinism are conducting a variety of initiatives in a bid to improve matters.

"We visit church leaders, tribal leaders and councilors to appeal to them to help people with albinism with hats, creams and sunglasses," said Joseph Ndinomupya, president of the Namibia Albinism Association Trust, an NGO which also looks to companies for assistance.

"We encourage church leaders, social workers and teachers to speak on the condition of albinism," said Tony Ngwenya, director of the Johannesburg-based Albinism Society of South Africa. In South Africa one in every 4,000 persons has albinism.

While a lack of funding prevents the society from conducting programmes in the workplace to educate employers about albinism, there is an outreach to schools at present: "We have a school competition this year. It’s an essay competition on albinism which closes in July. We encourage students to research and write about albinos."

In Zimbabwe, said Makumbe, there have been successful efforts to move albino teachers from hot areas to milder parts, where they will be safer from the sun.

"Some ministries have also approached us to employ our people as clerks and office messengers," he noted. "We tried to get some albinos to work in industry, but we found that some chemicals affect their skin."

Women less likely to kill children at birth

Makumbe’s association receives almost 2,500 U.S. dollars a month from Econet Wireless, a Harare-based company. "This goes a long way to paying salaries and meeting the rent of our office," he said. "But it’s very hard to raise fund for albinos."

Still, he noted, "In Zimbabwe, discrimination against albinos is gradually fading away. Women are unlikely to kill their children at birth for fear that people would laugh at them."

The situation elsewhere in the region is less promising, he believes.

"We have worked with albinos in Namibia but they are not getting the support of the authorities there. In Botswana, we didn’t get anywhere. In Mozambique it was fruitless. Up to now Mozambicans come over to Zimbabwe to collect (skin) lotions to deliver to people with albinism in Mozambique."

 
1 comment   Comment >
Lordwick kgwedi
Albinos also Victims of Discrimination in Africa

Hi Guys you know what i’m have the albinisim skin i’m doing correctional service as my course here at Tshwane University of Techonology, 23 years old. Last year i was doning fine art at TUT so i have stragle i didn’t have the support from my lectures so i did give up, and i did change my course to correctional service, i have done art as my subject at Filadelfia secondary school (the school for the diabled peopl)

I’m Staying at Tempo Residence TUT residence were there is no an albinisim, they call me by names e.g lekgowa, Molugu but i enjoy because i expirience the life of normal peoples they even ask me the questions e.g does albinos die? then i explain to them i says they do then i started explain why people are saying we don’t die

In the olden days the use to kill their albinisim babes then the tell people that the babe disapeared.

To be hornest with you people i like to marry the partialy sight or the albinisim girl is no that i discriminat normal people no is my disire. i do enjoy the life is cool to me sence well people adimit what we are.

we are the future of South Africa, we are what we are because of the Mighty God and we a created with the image of God, Respect is what i need form people because i’m with it.Love and happyness is what i need in life. Respect me and i’w’ll too. We are the engels of God.

Self confidence is what people with albinisim nee. if someone says lekgowa just smile. love and kgotso.

You know i have seen some of the abinisim people asking the momey from the people, one day one guy ask me why are thoes people ask the money does the albinisim people born to ask the money in the street. I said to him No some other people didn’t have the opotunity to go to school they don’t work they can’t work in the sun because our skin is sincitive.

I wish i could stop that. Some of the people the have the talent they can sing the can do the drama i sow them why don’t someone take them and expose their talent.

AMEN………..

21 July 2007
 

Comment

Forum registration required

Prior to reacting to this article, you must register. Thank you for entering the personal identifier supplied to you. If you are not already registered, you must register.

Personal identifiers


[register] [password forgotten?]

 
More articles about same themes ? Use advanced search
--------

How Child Friendly Is Africa 21.11

Congo: Human rights groups request special session of Human Rights Council 17.11

Zimbabwean Women Have Had ‘‘More Trauma’’ After Independence 17.11

DRC: Recruitment of child soldiers rising 13.11

African Commission probes Nigeria’s human rights records 10.11

--------

Indigenous people in Australia, an approach still paternalistic 29.10

UN Secretary-General Urges Iran to Improve Human Rights 22.10

Indigenous people still marginalised in Congo 28.08

Natives protest sale of land in Peru 21.08

U.S. and Canada found guilty of racism 8.08

--------

Blackwater Busted? 17.11

Rights lawyers file Spanish court case on El Salvador killings 14.11

Web Watcher: Universal Declaration of Human Rights 60th anniversary 12.11

Rights bodies urge help be given to 50 Guantanamo detainees 11.11

African Commission probes Nigeria’s human rights records 10.11

--------

Zimbabwean Women Have Had ‘‘More Trauma’’ After Independence 17.11

The Omar Khadr case: Redefining war crimes 10.11

-------- --------

Congo: Human rights groups request special session of Human Rights Council 17.11

2,000 Women’s rights activists gather in Cape Town for world’s largerst triennal forum on women in development 12.11

Charters  |  About us  |  www.humanrights-geneva.info  |  Editorial teams  |  Web Editor: Michel Bührer
designed by vocables.com with Spip
sommaire prix nicolas bouvier le temps geopolitis tsr.ch swissinfo rue 89 ipsnews infosud