Speaking on Monday at Tukombo beach during the commemoration of the World Aids Day and International Candlelight Memorial, he blamed cultural practices ofnthengwa imala, mโbulu umala cha(loosely translated as marriage can end but the two can still be having sex). Said Kachingwe: โThis is a cultural practice that is old-fashioned and fuels the spread of HIV. Maybe it was relevant in those days but not now.
Whosoever is still practising that should consider that there is HIV. โOne cannot get back to somebody one was 20 years ago as a partner. You never know where they went and if they are coming back to you, you have to ask yourself about what they are bringing to you.
I suggest that they should be undergoing HIV test first.โ On her par t, Nkhata Bay South legislator Emily Chinthu Phiri appealed to the communities to desist from discriminating against people living with HIV and Aids in the district. Nkhata Bay district director of health services Topcy Mdolo said HIV prevalence rate in the district stands at 6.9 percent. National Aids Commission head of audit and risk management Pike Mtumbuka said this yearโs commemoration targeted hotspots to help reverse the HIV prevalence rate in the country