Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09ASTANA1547
2009-09-21 06:35:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Astana
Cable title:  

KAZAKHSTAN: TEMIRTAU IS "AIDS CAPITAL OF KAZAKHSTAN"

Tags:  PGOV ECON SOCI SNAR KHIV KZ 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 ASTANA 001547 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR SCA/CEN, S/GAC, OES/PCI (PHUDAK)

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV ECON SOCI SNAR KHIV KZ
SUBJECT: KAZAKHSTAN: TEMIRTAU IS "AIDS CAPITAL OF KAZAKHSTAN"

ASTANA 00001547 001.2 OF 003


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 ASTANA 001547

SIPDIS

STATE FOR SCA/CEN, S/GAC, OES/PCI (PHUDAK)

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV ECON SOCI SNAR KHIV KZ
SUBJECT: KAZAKHSTAN: TEMIRTAU IS "AIDS CAPITAL OF KAZAKHSTAN"

ASTANA 00001547 001.2 OF 003



1. SUMMARY: Home to AcelorMittal, Kazakhstan's giant steel plant,
Temirtau is known as the "AIDS capital of Kazakhstan." An
"explosion" of new HIV/AIDS cases peaked in 1997, then dropped, and
has since held steady. The local AIDS Center believes that
financial difficulties and layoffs following Kazakhstan's
independence, a young migrant population without social restraints,
and the fact that drugs are cheaper than vodka led to the city's
high rate. While no reliable drug-use data exists, the Center
estimates that two-thirds of HIV/AIDS cases are drug users or their
sexual partners. Many of those who seek counseling and treatment
do not work, cannot adapt to societal norms, and need help obtaining
government assistance. END SUMMARY.

AIDS IN TEMIRTAU


2. ArcelorMittal, Kazakhstan's massive steel plant that employs
45-50 percent of the people living in the "company" town of
Temirtau, attracts many outsiders to Termirtau looking for work.
Temirtau has the highest incidence of HIV/AIDS in Kazakhstan, with
1767 new cases registered since 1990 when the city registered its
first case. An ongoing "explosion" of HIV/AIDS cases in the city
accompanied AcelorMittal's 1996 resurgence. This "explosion" peaked
in 1997 with 386 new registered cases, then tapered off until 2001
when only 76 new cases of HIV/AIDS were registered. The rate of new
cases each year held steady until 2006, at approximately 70 new
registered cases each year, but then increased again to its current
level of over 130 new cases per year.

POSSIBLE CAUSES OF HIV/AIDS "EXPLOSION" IN TEMIRTAU


3. Speculating on the reasons for such a high rate of HIV/AIDS
cases in Temirtau, the Head Doctor-Epidemiologist of the city's AIDS
Center, Sholpan Baimurznina, linked the situation to the history of
ArcelorMittal, which employs almost half the city's population.
After Kazakhstan's independence, ArcelorMittal's financial
difficulties forced it to lay off many workers. The resulting
economic destabilization profoundly affected the emotional
well-being of this company town with only one real source of jobs.

Temirtau is right in the middle of a major narcotics route, and drug
use is widespread among the young and the unemployed. Drugs are
very cheap; a hypodermic needle filled with drugs costs less than a
shot of vodka. Because most of those with HIV/AIDS also use drugs,
Baimurznina attributes much of the spread of HIV/AIDS to
contaminated needles. With many young men out of work, going to
bars, and having loose, unprotected sex, it should not be surprising
that many discovered, to their astonishment, that they had
contracted HIV/AIDS. Many who initially left the city in search of
work, returned when the plant resumed production with various
problems, including drug addiction and HIV/AIDS. According to
Baimurznina, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) conducted a
gene type identification test on the cases of HIV/AIDS in Temirtau
and determined that many of the viruses were genetically similar to
viruses circulating in Europe. While the AIDS Center wants to use
this data to conclude that people were bringing HIV/AIDS with them
to Temirtau, CDC cautioned REO against drawing any conclusions from
that fact, since there could be many different routes of
transmission.


4. 2005-2006 saw a large influx of youth looking for work. Mostly
students who had just graduated from college, they lived without
restraints, free for the first time, and partook in Temirtau's night
life. Baimurznina believes these factors contributed to the second
"jump" in cases. Baimurznina complained that it is difficult to
change how people think about using condoms. Kazakhstan is stuck in
"old" ways of thinking, she said, different than the West.


5. Baimurznina said that, unfortunately, no adequate data exists on
the extent of drug use in Temirtau and the Karaganda region. 5500
people voluntarily have sought help with their addiction, but many
more are not registered because they have not come forward. She
believes, but cannot confirm due to statistical deficiencies, there
is a strong connection between the growth of drug use and the
increase in the incidence of HIV/AIDS. She estimated that
two-thirds of HIV/AIDS cases are drug users or their sexual
partners. Temirtau was also one of the Soviet Union's prison

ASTANA 00001547 002.2 OF 003


centers, and many of the exiles sent to the region had a high
incidence of drug usage, according to Baimurznina.

LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES


6. In 1990 following the official registration of the first
HIV/AIDS case in the city, the Ministry of Health designated
Temirtau a zone of concern and established its AIDS Center. At that
time, Almaty hosted the only other AIDS Center in Kazakhstan.
Currently, the Center's services range from the distribution of
information about AIDS prevention to the provision of treatments,
including anti-viral therapy. The United Nations Development
Program (UNDP) has helped the Center educate the local population
about HIV/AIDS and its prevention. UNDP and the Center have carried
out a harm reduction project and worked with at-risk groups (drug
users, prostitutes, transients, prisoners and ex-prisoners,
unemployed, and others). The AIDS Center is continuing this work on
its own while it seeks additional funding to help with this
program.

SITUATION NOW "UNDER CONTROL"...OR IS IT?


7. In response to the question, "Is the situation under control
now?" Baimurznina asserted that people will take drugs and engage in
unprotected sex regardless of information campaigns. She said
indicators do not exist to measure the effect of the Center's
program to encourage prophylactic use. Even though the Center
advocates restraint, condoms, and "know your partner," Temirtau's
incidence of new cases of HIV/AIDS each year remains high. She used
a counter-example to illustrate the "mentality" that persists in
Kazakhstan (and throughout the former Soviet Union): only 1-2
percent of Temirtau's residents use contraception to restrict birth;
abortion remains the overwhelming preferred method of birth control.
However, she highlighted that 40 percent of those who use abortion
say they will start using contraception in the future. Baimurznina
could not easily say the situation is under control, even though the
number of new cases each year remains steady.

VOLUNTARY AND MANDATORY HIV/AIDS SCREENING


8. Baimurznina said 10 percent of Temirtau's residents submit to
voluntary screening for HIV/AIDS each year. In addition, all
prisoners and blood and organ donors must undergo a mandatory
HIV/AIDS test. She said Temirtau's AIDS Center also serves
prisoners and noted that 30 percent of all HIV/AIDS cases are
prisoners in the Karaganda region. Of these, one-third are from
Karaganda, and the rest are prisoners transferred from other
Kazakhstani regions.

SHAPAGAT NGO DIRECTOR AN HIV/AIDS VICTIM, COUNSELOR IS FORMER DRUG
ADDICT


9. One of Temirtau AIDS Center's implementing partners is the
HIV/AIDS NGO Shapagat. Kazakh for "mercy, benefaction, patronage,"
Shapagat carries out education campaigns, gives guidance to victims
and sex workers, and provides emotional and psychological counseling
to those with HIV/AIDS and drug users. Its director, Zoya
Ruzhnikova, is a lively mid-30s woman who is currently undergoing
anti-viral therapy and taking medication to treat her own HIV/AIDS.
She says that this personal tragedy gave her life a new direction.
Shapagat's counselor, Aida Arapbayeva, is a recovering drug addict
in her late 20s whose voice has been damaged by drug use. Studying
to be a counselor, she works with Shapagat to help current and
former addicts.


10. Ruzhnikova said Shapagat gets its funding for counseling and
educational work from Counterpart Consortium, The TIDES Foundation
(a U.S. philanthropic fund),the Dutch AIDS Foundation East-West
(AFEW),and the International Red Cross. In addition, Shapagat has
worked with legal aid groups to create the "All Kazakhstan Union of
AIDS" network to help HIV/AIDS victims with questions concerning
employment, housing, and benefits. Shapagat recently started a
pilot project to place an HIV/AIDS treatment clinic inside a
maternity home to treat sex workers, women with HIV/AIDS, and drug
users. It will also provide counseling and advice to those with

ASTANA 00001547 003.2 OF 003


psychological and/or emotional problems, give guidance to family
members, provide support groups, and help with rehabilitation and
social reintegration. Ruzhnikova hopes to expand this service to
other cities in the region.


11. Ruzhnikova said many who seek counseling and treatment do not
work, cannot adapt to society's norms, and need help obtaining
government assistance. (NOTE: In Kazakhstan, citizens must have a
document called a "propusk" that grants them legal status in a city
or region. While many move to work, without a proper "propusk,"
they cannot receive government assistance should they need it. END
NOTE.) Ruzhnikova said most of those seeking counseling have a
complex of associated problems: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, drug
addition, homelessness, unemployment, and social intransigence.


12. COMMENT: Temirtau has the reputation of being the "AIDS
capital of Kazakhstan" because of its high incidence of cases.
While it is easier for donor organizations to work with groups and
centers in Astana and Almaty, Temirtau's experience shows much about
the spread of HIV/AIDS in Kazakhstan, its likely causes, and the
effect of economic turmoil, drug use, and transient populations on
transmission. As the U.S. Government looks for worthy organizations
to support, we should not overlook the work by local groups, such as
those in Temirtau. END COMMENT.