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How sexual violence survivors in South Africa are now collateral damage of Trump's aid cuts

How sexual violence survivors in South Africa are now collateral damage of Trump's aid cuts

Independent29-05-2025
Donald Trump 's decision to slash international aid has had a crippling impact on HIV services – with a lifeline linking rape and sexual violence survivors to support now becoming collateral damage.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, girls and young women are more than twice as likely as their male peers to contract HIV, driven in part by an increased risk of facing sexual exploitation. Funding to tackle the virus is often also used to fund gender-based violence services.
Take the Networking HIV and AIDS Community of Southern Africa (NACOSA) based in South Africa. NACOSA received 40 per cent of its funding thanks to the DREAMS programme run by the United States Agency for International Development. Standing for 'Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-Free, Mentored and Safe', the DREAMS programme provided two million young people in 15 African countries with a wide range of initiatives from the more direct – HIV testing, condoms and medication – to less obvious ways to address viral spread, like mentoring, life skills, financial literacy training and free sanitary products.
Although DREAMS was set up as an HIV prevention programme, the close link between sexual violence and the virus meant it ended up providing a crucial link to rape crisis support, regardless of survivors' HIV status. 'Young women are more vulnerable if they are dependent. If they are in poverty [they are] more vulnerable to both gender-based violence and HIV,' explains Sophie Hobbs from NACOSA. Research found some girls were being coerced into sex in exchange for period products.
In sessions to help them to understand what abuse and harassment looks like, girls and young women would often tell their mentors about experiences of abuse – and be linked to emergency contraception and counselling services. 'It would have been disclosed to us, 'my stepdad has been doing this for the longest time and I didn't realise it was wrong',' explains Tarryn Lokotsch, chief executive of the Greater Rape Intervention Program (GRIP) in eastern South Africa, which works with NACOSA and received half of its funding via the DREAMS programme.
'We would be able to link them to care at the hospital, test them for any sexually transmitted diseases, link them to care if they needed it. 'So, the prevention programme fed very nicely into the response programme,' she adds.
The DREAMS funding supported a network of care rooms in hospitals, police stations and magistrates' courts. Care rooms allow people can report assaults privately, rather than, 'standing in a long queue,' Lokotsch says, and, 'having to report what's happened to you with every other person that might just be coming to get a document certified'.
In hospitals, Lokotsch's group provides care packs to help give survivors back a sense of dignity after the ordeal of a forensic examination, which can include having to hand in their underwear as evidence. These packs include toiletries, sanitary products and spare clothes, as well as emergency money to get home safely. 'Basically we are trying to hold the victim's hand from the moment that they report right through to their day in court,' Lokotsch says.
GRIP makes sure survivors who test negative for HIV can begin and complete a full course of Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) which prevents the virus developing. 'The majority of our rape survivors remain HIV negative only because we've managed to [link them to] PEP medication,' she says. Those testing positive are linked to antiretroviral treatment — care they might otherwise struggle to access.
But all that is at risk.
'You just disappeared'
'This month we did have to close down one of our care rooms,' Lokotsch says. With the rest of the network 'not sustainable forever' with more cuts to come if new funding isn't found. 'We still receive phone calls to ask, where are you guys? We relied on you so much and you just disappeared,' she adds.
Without these support services, 'people are beginning to get a little bit more reluctant to report [gender-based violence], which is really scary', Lokotsch says.
A State Department spokesperson said: '[The US] continues to support lifesaving HIV testing, care and treatment, and prevention of mother to child transmission services approved by the Secretary of State. This includes lifesaving HIV treatment for adolescent girls and young women,' adding that, 'ensuring we have the right mix of programmes to support US national security and other core national interests of the United States requires an agile approach. We will continue to make changes as needed.'
Lokotsch herself is a survivor of sexual violence. After being attacked while on a run, she didn't know where to go, and sought care at a private hospital which wasn't set up to conduct forensic examinations. 'I had people taking photos of me and someone saying they need to do a medical forensic examination, and people are touching you everywhere. It's the most uncomfortable thing in the world and no one is telling you why they are taking photos or what they are doing,' she recalls.
That experience eventually led her to GRIP. Years later, she took over running the service where she works to stop others having the same trauma-compounding experience she had.
In South Africa, emergency contraception and PEP are available in public facilities, but people often don't know they are there. 'In theory, post-violence care services are not interrupted [by the US cuts],' says Dr Ntlotleng Mabena, a public health doctor who worked with NACOSA. 'But in practice, we know that survivors need a safe place to go to before they get to that service.'
Specialist post-violence centres are also not always accessible to people in rural areas. 'In certain provinces there's only one in the region and probably a three-hour taxi ride. Who's going to want to take a three-hour taxi ride after you've been raped?' Dr Mabena asks.
'I didn't know where I was going'
Bongi, a 41-year-old mother of five, met Lokotsch's team in a police station after fleeing a violent relationship. 'I stayed there being violated,' she explains to The Independent, because, 'the person who violated me is the one who gave me food'. She had three kids with him by the time the violence started.
'I didn't know where I was going. I didn't have enough money. I went to the police station,' she says of the day she left with her younger children, after her partner threatened to burn down their house with her inside. For two nights they slept at the police station, and then on the floor of a garage, without being offered help. It wasn't until a police officer finally connected her to GRIP that she was offered comprehensive medical checks, and afterwards, a place in a shelter.
Bongi is HIV positive, but had been on and off treatment for years and did not want to reveal her status over fears it would only lead to discrimination. 'I lied because I didn't get help in the police station,' she said, so when she met the GRIP team she thought: 'Here are some ladies who want to help me. If I maybe speak about my status, I'm not going to get the help that I need.'
Once she realised they would help her no matter what, she resolved to, 'see what I can do so I can get back on medication'.
Dr Isolde Birdthistle at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who has carried out evaluations of DREAMS in a number of places, say the benefits included the social support and empowerment of girls, and in some cases changes in sexual behaviours such as condom use. The biggest effect was on participants knowing their HIV status, Birdthistle explains, which is the first step to link them to treatment or prevention.
Girls also reported feeling less scared to test for HIV and more supported if they had experienced violence, Birdthistle says. While the loss of 'safe spaces' in areas where there are often no formal refuges for victims of violence is also a 'big loss,' she adds.
For Lokotsch, it is the speed of the change in the wake of Trump's aid cuts that is most jarring. 'I do understand the perspective that the South African HIV crisis and [gender-based violence] crisis is not necessarily America's problem,' she says. 'But America did choose at the start of this to lead the fight against HIV. They took that step to lead the fight internationally.
'And then to pull out and decide that they don't want to lead that fight anymore... We could have got some warning.'
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Trump's freewheeling and unorthodox West Wing: From the Politics Desk
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Opinion: Where Musk may have to flee to if Trump deports him
Opinion: Where Musk may have to flee to if Trump deports him

Daily Mail​

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Opinion: Where Musk may have to flee to if Trump deports him

He's the richest man in the world with unlimited funds and an army of supporters who have his back. But Elon Musk may be scrambling to come up with a contingency plan as his former best friend - who is the President of the United States - has threatened to deport him. The billionaire was born in Pretoria, South Africa, but his relationship with his country of birth might at best be described as rocky. He has accused the government there of being racist against white people, and it is hard to imagine him wanting to return. Another route could be Canada, where he has citizenship through his mother. But he is unpopular there, with 400,000 Canadians signing a petition to strip his citizenship. The idea of Musk leaving the US, where he has been a naturalized citizen since 2002, has arisen after he fell out spectacularly with Donald Trump in recent weeks. Long gone are the days when 'first buddy' Musk, as head of Trump's DOGE unit, was a constant presence by the President's side at the White House and Mar-a-Lago. Instead, Musk has been throwing bombs on X in a bid to blow up Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill,' the legislative centerpiece of his second term. Trump believes the bill will turbocharge the economy with millions of jobs, while Musk has slammed it as 'insane' and claimed it will balloon the deficit by trillions of dollars. Amid the escalating war of words on Tuesday, Trump was asked if he would deport Musk. Speaking, appropriately enough, at a new migrant detention facility called 'Alligator Alcatraz' in Florida, Trump responded: 'Well have to take a look...' In a further threat, he suggested cutting federal subsidies to Musk's companies including SpaceX and Tesla. Ominously, he added: 'Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa..' But there are few countries currently less hospitable for Musk than his birthplace. In May, when South African president Cyril Ramaphosa visited the Oval Office, Trump ambushed him on the issue of the deaths of white farmers. Standing silently behind a sofa, on the shoulder of Vice President JD Vance, was Musk. The billionaire did not speak during the event, but occasionally smiled to himself. At one point Trump had the lights dimmed and played a video of people in South Africa chanting 'Shoot the Boer, Shoot the farmer.' Footage was also shown of white crosses erected in memory of murdered white farmers. The footage had previously been posted on social media by Musk. The meeting came two months after Musk unloaded on South Africa in a row over whether it would allow use of his Starlink satellites 'Starlink is not allowed to operate in South Africa, because I'm not black,' a furious Musk wrote on X. He appeared to be taking a swipe at South Africa's Black Economic Empowerment rules that foreign-owned telecommunications licensees sell 30 percent of the equity in their local subsidiaries to historically disadvantaged groups. With a new life in South Africa unlikely, Musk could also go to Canada. His mom Mae was born in Saskatchewan and moved to South Africa in 1950 with her parents when she was seven. Elon Musk went the other way as a teenager, moving briefly to Canada aged 17 in 1988. He is said to have arrived with a backpack, some books and a few thousand dollars - and then obtained citizenship through his mother. But, while the country might once have been proud of its brief association with his success, that has faded. Musk's association with Trump's attempts to annex Canada as the '51st state' have left him a pariah. Above a Tesla dealership in Ottawa, Canadian flags have been draped from a nearby tower block in protest. The petition 'He has used his wealth and power to influence our elections,' the petition claims. 'He has now become a member of a foreign government that is attempting to erase Canadian sovereignty.' In a response to the petition, Musk wrote on X 'Canada is not a real country.' CNN has reached out to Musk's representatives for comment. The petition to Parliament aims to 'revoke Elon Musk's dual citizenship status, and revoke his Canadian passport effective immediately.' It says: 'He has used his wealth and power to influence our elections. He has now become a member of a foreign government that is attempting to erase Canadian sovereignty.' Musk has responded by saying: 'Canada is not a real country.' There appears no sign of Musk making any move to establish an alternate base outside the US. He owns many homes in America, including a massive compound in Texas, and his 12 children are all American He does not appear to currently own a home outside the US. If push came to shove, and the pressure from Trump to leave became too much, the billionaire might be tempted to head to a Middle Eastern tax haven like Dubai. But unless he renounces his US citizenship then he would still have to pay tax to Uncle Sam on the vast majority of his income. If he did renounce his US citizenship he would be unable to base his companies in the US. There have been unconfirmed reports that he was looking at buying a home in Portugal, after a visit last year. Another possibility would be Shanghai, China, where Tesla has its biggest factory, or Germany where the biggest Tesla site in Europe is located. But Musk does not speak the language of either country. Experts say it is highly unlikely Trump would be able to deport Musk, so the president would have to use other levers such as making life difficult for the billionaire's companies. But those calling for Trump to investigate Musk's immigration history were given extra ammunition recently by a resurfaced interview from 2013. In it Musk is seen being interviewed on stage at the Milken Institute with younger brother Kimbal. The conversation turned to how they raised money for their first startup in America, a software company called Zip2. 'In fact, when they did fund us, they realized that we were illegal immigrants...' Kimbal laughed. It was an uncomfortable moment for the soon-to be richest man in the world, and future vocal critic of unlawful migration. 'Well....,' said Elon hesitantly. 'Yes we were,' Kimbal responded. 'I would say it was a gray area,' said Elon. 'Yes we were. We were illegal immigrants,' Kimbal repeated. He then moved on to describe how the struggling Musk brothers had owned a car with a wheel that fell off. Elon Musk has since maintained that, while his brother was in the United States illegally, he himself did have the right to work when they set up Zip2 in the 1990s. The suggestion that he was originally in the U.S. illegally remains unproven, and he has vehemently denied it. It stems from a Washington Post investigation last year, citing company documents, former business associates and court records. According to the report Musk arrived in Palo Alto, California in 1995 for a graduate program at Stanford University, but never enrolled, instead starting Zip2 with his brother. They went on to sell that company for $300 million four years later. Musk has said that his first visa was a J-1 student visa. The J-1 Exchange Visitor visa lets foreign students get academic training in U.S. 'Musk would have needed to be engaged in a full course of study (at least 12 academic hours a semester) in order to qualify for work while being a J-1 student,' according to Greg Siskind, a leading immigration lawyer. And Stanford would have had to have approved the work.' However, Musk has said that 'I was on a J-1 visa that transitioned to an H1-B.' The H1-B visa is for temporary employment. According to the Washington Post early investors in Zip2 were concerned about immigration status, and one said: 'We don't want our founder being deported.' The newspaper also cited a 2005 email from Musk to his Tesla co-founders about his immigration status in the 1990s. 'Actually, I didn't really care much for the degree, but I had no money for a lab and no legal right to stay in the country, so that seemed like a good way to solve both issues,' Musk wrote. On a podcast in 2021, again with Kimbal, Musk sought to clarify the issue. 'I don't know if you were, but I was not legally in America. So I was illegally there,' Kimbal said. Elon replied: 'I was legally there, but I was meant to be student work, I had a student work visa.' His brother said: 'You were supposed to be doing a PhD. at Stanford and decided not to.' 'I was allowed to do work, sort of supporting, whatever, you know,' Elon said. 'No, no, you're illegal. I was legal, but my visa was going to run out in two years. Student visa.' Despite his protestations that there was nothing amiss with his initial immigration status, Musk has faced attacks over it from an unlikely alliance of critics on the right and left. Earlier this month, MAGA firebrand Steve Bannon said: 'I am of the strong belief that he is an illegal alien, and he should be deported from the country immediately, Elon Musk is illegal, and he's got to go. He's illegal? Deport immediately. You're going to ship these other people home. Let's start with the South Africans, OK?' And, last October, then-President Joe Biden claimed: 'That wealthiest man in the world turned out to be an illegal worker here. No, I'm serious. 'He was supposed to be in school when he came on a student visa. He wasn't in school. He was violating the law. And he's talking about all these illegals coming our way?' Elon Musk has since maintained that, while his brother was in the United States illegally, he himself did have the right to work when they set up Zip2 in the 1990s. 'I was in fact allowed to work in the U.S.,' Musk wrote on X. 'The Biden puppet is lying.'

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Reuters

time16 hours ago

  • Reuters

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