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Tuesday, 15 October, 2002, 10:20 GMT 11:20 UK
New hope for HIV orphan
Su (right) and Julie Baldwin
New life: Su started on ARV drugs on her birthday
The generosity of BBC News Online readers has enabled an HIV-positive orphan in Zambia to begin treatment.

Suwilanji Nachiwezya, 14, was born with the disease which has since claimed the lives of her parents.

Suwilanji
Su, like many in Africa, was born with the disease
Her story was told in our weekly Real Time series in August by an English couple who have taken her under their wing.

Ian Godfrey and Julie Baldwin, who run a guest house in Kitwe, told how Su's health had started to deteriorate. The girl needed to start on antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) - drugs she would have to take for the rest of her life.

But ARVs cost about �80 a month. Su's family cannot afford the medical treatment required; and the couple told of their difficulties fundraising in a country suffering from famine and recession.

Many readers e-mailed messages of support, and two sizable donations came in from the United States.

So far more than $1,000 (�650) has been raised, enough to fund Su's ARVs for 18 months. She started on the drugs on 13 September, her 14th birthday.

Ms Baldwin says: "She spent that weekend with us and we baked a birthday cake for her. She ate all her meals and even came back for more, had a smile on her face and much more energy. Within that couple of days she looked and acted like a different girl."

Happy and healthier

One month on, Su is making good progress. The head sores that have so plagued her have almost healed and her hair has started to grow back.

Ian, Su and Julie
Ian, Su and Julie at the guest house
"Su spent this last weekend with us and she looked even better. She was running - something we have never seen her do before - and she was also swinging arm-over-arm on a climbing frame.

"Her energy seems boundless now. She is eating well and has a lovely sparkle in her eyes."

In addition to the US donors, several Britons have been looking at ways to make monthly contributions without being hit by steep bank fees. And a Los Angeles-based charity plans to take up the case of Su and other HIV-positive orphans in Kitwe.

The couple expressed their thanks - and Su's - to those BBC News Online readers who pledged support. "It has achieved wonders."


Send your comments, using the form below:

Once again the power of the internet and its ability to effect change is demonstrated. It's stories like these that remind me there's good in the world and that I'm fortunate for what I have.
Sonia, UK

This story is great but there are thousands of other children in the same situation who need help. Anyone interested in HIV/STI work going on in Africa can check out africaid.co.uk.
Cal, UK

Because of this goodwill Su will live a longer, healthier life.
Paula Ravenor, Zambia

What we need is not individual generosity but policy changes that will help everyone in Africa. Let's start with the cancellation of debt - it is the servicing of huge payments that makes it impossible for African governments to allocate adequate funds for health care. Currently, most African countries pay more to service external debt than for health and education combined.
Nunu Kidane, Eritrea

This is great, and I hope Su will live to be an old woman; but she is only one person. Read the CIA World Factbook. Look at the HIV figures. What's needed is a large-scale effort to fight this plague. Life expectancy is plummeting all over Africa, and tens of millions will die if nothing is done.
Rache Bartmoss, Germany

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Disclaimer: The BBC will put up as many of your comments as possible but we cannot guarantee that all e-mails will be published. The BBC reserves the right to edit comments that are published.
See also:

12 Aug 02 | Health
28 Nov 01 | Africa
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