From the depths of distress, disillusionment, dejection and the certainty of untimely death occasioned by HIV infection through blood transfusion at the tender age of 12, Gloria Asuquo, has risen to become a vibrant, assertive and ambitious young woman who is taking a decisive and incisive battle to one of the world’s most dreaded infectious disorders – HIV/AIDS.
In an encounter with Sola Ogundipe
in Abuja, the energetic 24-year-old recounted the frustrations of living as a
pauper in addition to the ignominy of HIV stigma and discrimination.
Today, Gloria who once contemplated
death until sheer luck and doggedness turned her fortunes around and brought
unhindered access to the elusive, life-saving treatment has undergone a
transformation. The same HIV infection that took her to the brink of total
despair is today a source of her blessing. How did it happen? She tells it all
in this encounter.
I’m a young person diagnosed HIV
positive at 12. I was in Primary six going to JSS1. I got infected through
blood transfusion. The stigma was so much I couldn’t bear it. There were drugs
at that time, but they were too expensive for my parents to afford. Each time
my father raised the money to pay for my drugs, my mother would challenge him.
Why are you giving her the money? she would ask. We know that she would soon
die. Why is she taking the drugs? Why are we wasting money? My mother
went to the Church and told the Reverend who announced my status to the
community.
He advised I should be taken to one
of the General Hospitals and abandoned there to die. But my father refused to
heed such advice. Rather, he challenged the Reverend to take one of his four
children to the hospital and abandon her there to die first, only then would he
obey the instruction. The pressure became too much.
My mother separated me from the rest
of the family. She demarcated my own part of the house separate from the
others. The stigma became too much.
One day I could not bear it again.
The pressure was too much for me to bear. I had to break the window and jumped
out to escape from home at the age of 12. I escaped to an unknown village
called Oki. I went to Jabi Park in Abuja, I had only N800. I didn’t know where
to go, but just wanted to leave and even die.
I wanted to die. I was in the bush;
I had stopped using my drugs which at that time cost N15, 000 per month. Test
for CD4 count was N6, 000, viral load N12, 000. Where was I going to get that
kind of money? I wasn’t working, I just told God to let me die.
Before then, I went to NTA and
shared my story. I told them I was HIV positive; I wanted to declare my status
to the world. They said I should cover my face, but I said no. I wanted the
world to know my story so that if I die, everyone would know what killed me.
Breaking the stigma is an individual thing. If you want to come out to testify,
nobody can take that away from you.
Then I met Dr. Anthony Agu, a
lecturer at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. When he asked about my parents,
I burst into tears. He took me to the University and I told him my story. He
took me to his house, gave me a room to stay. But he told me not to disclose my
status to his family. He enabled me continue my education and in 1996, I
finished my school.
Dr. Agu then told me that he heard
that the drugs were now free that I should go and try. So I went back to
Gwagwalada General Hospital where I met Dr. Ajayi. When he asked if I had been
taken my drugs, I said yes. I lied to him because I was afraid that if I told
him I had not been on drugs, he would send me away.
But he placed me on the drugs. That
night I went back to Nsukka, but never went back home. Dr. Ajayi got all my
details and related to Dr. Pat Matemilola and Professor Babatunde Oshotimehin
who were all looking for me. Eventually, it was Godwin Odemije of Radio Nigeria
that came to look for me, and brought me back home. In 2006, I developed
typhoid and ovarian cyst. Doctors said I would be operated upon because I
stopped using my drugs for a number of years. To the glory of God, I’m still on
firstline drugs.
God first, but the treatment has
kept me alive till today. If there were no free drugs, by now, I would have
been a forgotten issue. People would have forgotten me, my name would not be
written anywhere. HIV has become a blessing to me. I am sitting with important
people.
If not for HIV, I would not meet Ministers, and Ambassadors and so many
important people. If not for HIV, I would not have ever fly in an aircraft. I’m
proud to be HIV positive. Today, I’m a testimony in my family, there is no
meeting at which they do not seek my opinion. I’m proud that I’m HIV positive.
I’m still pleading to the
Ambassadors and everyone in the country to make these drugs accessible
especially the youths and women. We are the most vulnerable and do not have anywhere
to go. We are tomorrow’s leaders. We may be driven out when we are diagnosed
with HIV because the general belief is that HIV is contracted through
promiscuity. But HIV can be contracted through many ways.
If the drugs are made to be more
available, only then can we truly have the three zeros, that is, zero related
deaths, zero new infection and zero stigma. As a young person I cannot come out
but keep quiet and spread it, but if we provide access to treatment, give free
education, employment and there is no stigma, I bet you, these three zeros will
be achieved.
I’m dreaming to become a medical
doctor. I want to achieve this. HIV has nothing to do with my future. I would
match it and overcome it. I need you to help me achieve my dream and also to
find a cure to HIV. I want my name to be great, so that it will be said that
Gloria Asuquo found a cure to HIV. I want a scholarship so that I can achieve
my goal.
- Vanguard
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