He says before he started taking medicines, he weighed 42 kilos, but now he weighs 57 kilos and feels much better.
He found out he was HIV positive in 2006. His wife died of AIDS four years ago. He has four children, all of them in school.
He says people are afraid to touch you. He says families,
burberry, friends and relatives abandon you. He says they think you have HIV,
burberry soldes, because you have sinned.
He gets anti-retroviral medicine every two months in another center,
burberry, through the international aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
The man accepts to talk about his struggles, but says he wants to do so anonymously.
But he says he quit teaching, when he was too weak.
He says,
burberry soldes, in most places when people know you are HIV positive, they do not want to help you. They do not even want to smell you. He says here,
ralph lauren, you get free food.
He says he would like to see non-governmental organizations organize revenue-generating projects for patients, like raising cattle or opening small shops.
By Nico Colombant
Nzerekore,
burberry, Guinea
07 February 2008
Before he got sick, he was a teacher in a private school.
He says patients should be serious about taking their medicine and not be ashamed to seek outside help. He says HIV is like any other disease.
Guinea Aid workers say more HIV help centers are needed (file photo)A tall, thin man in his 40s, patiently awaits his monthly ration of food, donated by the World Food Program (WFP) and other donors, through a local non-governmental organization.
West Africa has lower HIV/AIDS rates than other parts of Africa. However, there is also generally less awareness and openness about the disease, especially in former French colonies like Guinea. Nzerekore, where the man lives,
burberry soldes, is one of the worst affected areas in the region,
burberry soldes, having been at the crossroads of displacements from conflicts in nearby Liberia, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast.
He says it is hard to get employed if people find out you are HIV-positive.
Living in West Africa with HIV/AIDS can turn into a lonely battle, especially in remote areas, where stigmatization remains prevalent. One man in Nzerekore,
franklin marshall, Guinea, shared his struggles with VOA's Nico Colombant.
He says he is feeling much better,
burberry, since joining the program.
The HIV-positive man says the government holds lots of conferences about AIDS, but he only sees non-governmental organizations reaching out.
When donors help, he recommends they not forget the local volunteers. He says many of them are barely paid and even lose money, because their salary is lower than their transportation costs.
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