home

The Secret Of Snake Powers

Secrets are real.

Archives for: July 2008

For Proper Family Planning!

This is what remains of a poster stuck to a streetpole outside a friend's house in a relatively wealthy area. The street connects the University of Cape Town to it's nearest railway station and is used primarily by educated and relatively well off students. The poster used to have strips at the bottom that you could tear off, with contact details of the doctor. Some herbalist fliers that I have posted here before also offer abortions, with taglines like "30 min, no pain". I'm not sure how legitimate DR. Samuel is*, but the herbalists are definitely not regulated.

Abortion in South Africa is legal and does not require the woman to ask for another person's consent for the operation. Abortions are free in state hospitals, but have a waiting list that can be anything up to a month long. Private clinics that offer safe abortions (Maria Stopes) cost anything from R1600. Both these options include counselling before and after.

I phoned DR. Samuel, who runs an office/clinic in Cape Town city center. He offers medical abortion (pills). If the woman is 12 weeks pregnant it will cost R700. If she waits another month before going to DR. Samuel it will cost upwards of R1000. He offered no objection to my hypothetical girlfriend waiting until she was 16 weeks pregnant. 12 weeks is the oldest a fetus is allowed to be aborted unless:

(i) the continued pregnancy would pose a risk of injury to the woman's physical or mental health; or (ii) there exists a substantial risk that the fetus would suffer from a severe physical or mental abnormality; or (iii) the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest; or (iv) the continued pregnancy would significantly affect the social or economic circumstances of the woman.

http://www.info.gov.za/acts/1996/a92-96.pdf

*DR. Samuel did say that his service was legal

Misunderstanding

Chase Demons and Tokoloshi

This one uses the same names and numbers as the one seven back from this one, 'Marriage Consultant and Psychic'.

Real Life

I walked through Wynberg yesterday and was somewhat astounded by the recent developments. It's been a few months since I was last there. I've always known the area as being a bit run down, with every third shop on the main road being unoccupied. I found yesterday that a large tract of land on the main road has been cleared for the construction of a new 'upmarket' housing development. A strange source of evidence of the area's gentrification can be found in the Herbalists.

The Herbalists now sell Aloe Vera products. The front of the shops are almost indistinguishable from upmarket Body Shops. The products are professionally packaged and I'm confident that many of the products can be found in stores in Cavendish Square (an upmarket shopping mall two suburbs down the main road). The products include dietary supplements and skin products.

There are some Herbalist stores on the main road that keep the backroom-clinic appearance that I was expecting. There are more Herbalists now and at least two are now selling professionally packaged health/cosmetic products. I'm sure this is a sign of something, something macro-economical.

I saw a shocking 3 minute video clip that I think was shot for a documentary on alternative medicines for AIDS. The fliers that I post will sometimes state upfront that they can't cure AIDS, but can help the symptoms. Other times vague wording is used that hints at treatment. I'm not sure if this is a deliberate or if it is the result of the advertiser not being a first language English speaker.

The people on this short clip were quite confident in their ability to cure AIDS. The clip had an interview with this man. The clip also shows a woman with HIV asking whether she should continue her use of anti-retrovirals if she wants to take Ubhejane. She is told that she shouldn't take them both as there are no studies on how safely the two medicines integrate. She is also told that the Ubhejane will cure her in a short period of time.

I've been told by friends who live in townships that there are a large number of herbalists there from other African countries such as Nigeria and Kenya (the fliers that I post are mainly for foreign herbalists). These herbalists are apparently often seen as being more powerful than local herbalists as they use more exotic herbs. The sense of exotic magic used is similar to the popular stereotypes that you would find in Hollywood films: Japanese/Chinese, Indian, Native American and Jamaican. The clients are told that consultation costs R30-R50, or sometimes a bit higher for AIDS consulation, a nominal fee in comparison to that of the actual herbs, which are shipped in from far away mystical locations. This may soud a bit cynical of me, but I think the actual prices of the herbs depend on how gullible you are and how convincingly they trick you. I heard that the costs are usually around R1000 a month, which in the case of most people living in the townships is if not the majority of their mothly wages, a very significant portion.

More info on the treatment of HIV/AIDS: Treatment Action Campaign