Yu Guodeng, 15, felt his life has
been back to normal for the first time since his father and mother
died of AIDS. "When flowers and trees bathe in sunlight, they are
full of vitality," he wrote.
As an AIDS-orphaned kid in Yingjiang
County, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Yang, living with his
elderly brother, dropped out of school after his mother's death in
2003. His father already died in 2000. He worked as a construction
worker for 10-odd-yuan (US$1.25) a day. "I often worried that I
would have no launch when having breakfast."
"I lost parents and have no chance
to go to school, it's all darkness ahead of me," that's how he
described his feelings then. But fortunately, with a program
sponsored by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), he
resumed junior high school years soon after.
With the program support, he gets
100 yuan (US$12.5) as living expense, 20 yuan (US$2.5) for medical
care monthly and 320 yuan (US$40) as tuition for every school year.
His life is turning back to normal.
In the small county bordering
Myanmar, there are 123 AIDS-orphaned children like Yu. Many of
their parents were infected through drug taking or unsafe sex, as
the region is not far off "Golden Triangle", the world's second
largest drug production base.
The kids, left behind, most live in
homes of their grandparents or uncles or aunts.
Starting from 2003, UNICEF, together
with local women's federation and Yunnan AIDS prevention and
control office, initiated a program to offer care to these kids and
support for the families that adopt them to ensure they live a life
like other children.
With the support of UNICEF and local
officials, Yu hoped he could enter a Beijing university and become
a charitarian to help more people in the future.
But, social discrimination poses a
psychological problem the kids have to face, said Xu Wenqing,
UNICEF China AIDS program officer.
Zuo Pingsai, who was enrolled in the
Yingjiang No.1 Middle School, best senior high school in Yingjiang,
this year, was afraid to let her new schoolmates to know her
parents died of the epidemic. "I'm afraid if they know, they'll
bully me or not play or talk with me."
In order to help them relieve
psychological pressure, local women's federation organizes
get-together activities for them twice every month, in the forms of
drawing, making handicraft or an outing, which are designed to help
them rebuild self-confidence.
"Their life was in dismay and nobody
wanted to talk with them, but the program enables more to care
about them," said Yang Linzhen, a local women's federation
official.
China had reported more than 120,000
HIV-infected cases by June, this year and over 7,000 died. As AIDS
keeps spreading, the issue of AIDS-orphaned children will become
more serious, "we need the whole society to work together," said
Xu.
(Xinhua News Agency October 24,
2005)
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