Henan tries to remove AIDS orphans' stigma
2/12/2005 8:16
Fourteen AIDS orphans merrily joined other teenagers in playing and visiting
key spots in Zhengzhou in central China's Henan Province. They were just kids,
doing kid-things, with no bias. The only difference: Their parents had died
of AIDS. It was a fitting observation for World AIDS Day yesterday, and China
has been trying to reduce the stigma attached to HIV/AIDS and to AIDS orphans.
Many orphans are not infected. Organized by Sunlight Homeland in Xingzhuang
Township, Weishi County, the orphans' tour is part of the province's efforts to
prevent AIDS orphans from being marginalized. By September 30, the number of
people living with the HIV virus, most of whom had been infected by illegal
blood transfusions, had totaled 30,387; of them, 18,334 had developed into AIDS
patients and 4,294 died of the disease. According to Wang Jumei, deputy
governor of Henan, there are 1,634 children who have been orphaned by AIDS in
Henan. Yang Wentao, a senior official with the Civil Affairs Bureau of Henan
Province, said Sunlight Homeland was greatly helping orphans left behind by
AIDS-infected parents. So far, the province has built more than 20 Sunlight
Homelands with special allocations from the government budgets. Each Sunlight
Homeland has teaching staff and other helpers, and each child receives a monthly
subsidy of 160 yuan (US$19.7). "While ensuring these orphans have enough to
eat and wear, we pay great attention to their psychological health," said
Yang. (Xinhua)
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