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Public transport crews linked to HIV in schoolgirls

The culture of "sare", or free rides from minibus taxi crews, is one of the causes of HIV infection among Kenyan schoolgirls, according to a new survey by Merlin International, a UK-based medical relief charity.

"The survey revealed that 20 percent of "matatu" [minibus taxi] crews had had sex with at least one schoolgirl in the last 12 months," Merlin's technical co-ordinator, Emma Llewellyn, said on Sunday in the western city of Kisumu, according to The Standard newspaper.

The study covered 176 drivers, touts and conductors during December 2005 in the western Kenyan districts of Bondo and Suba, and concluded that the transport industry accounted for 25 percent of HIV infections annually.

Llewellyn said the crew preferred sex with schoolgirls because they "looked innocent" and hardly suffered from sexual infections. "In return, the girls receive free rides, referred to as "sare", and gifts."

Merlin has set up a mobile voluntary counselling and testing facility in Kisumu for taxi crews and has also launched campaigns to encourage sexual behaviour change, and education about HIV transmission, prevention and care of infected persons.

"Matatu crews need urgent attention. Due to the perception that they are rowdy, they have been neglected in HIV prevention programmes," Llewellyn said. "Crews are vulnerable because of their limited understanding of the risks of HIV infection."

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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