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Video: Flash mob Grannies in Penticton

Flash mobs were organized across the globe Thursday to raise attention for World AIDS Day, and Penticton was no different.
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About 30 grandmothers from throughout the Okanagan took part in a special flash mob feat near the food court in Cherry Lane Mall Thursday afternoon to the tune of the Eurythmics song “Sisters are Doing it for Themselves” as part of World AIDS Day and grandmothers to grandmothers cause.

Flash mobs were organized across the globe Thursday to raise attention for World AIDS Day, and Penticton was no different.

Twirling, stomping and raising their hands in the air to the tune of Annie Lennox’s Sisters Doin’ It For Themselves, around 30 members of Grannies for Africa did their part in Capri Centre Mall in Kelowna and about the same amount in Penticton at Cherry Lane Shopping Centre to remind this community that HIV and AIDS are far from cured both abroad and locally.

“It’s a huge problem. Although inroads are being made and there have been huge improvements there are problems that have not been dealt with,” said Norma Lippa, of Grandmothers for Africa.

“People are still suffering from HIV/AIDS.”

Lippa and her fellow Okanagan members of Grandmothers for Africa focus their attention on Africa, where women are the face of the epidemic.

South Africa, for example, has one of the highest rates of HIV in the world, with an estimated seven million people living with the virus in 2015. According to some estimates, around 7,500 women aged 15 to 24 were infected with HIV every week last year. More than 90 per cent of the adolescents infected in Sub-Saharan Africa are girls.

That’s left a number of elderly women taking responsibility for families that have been ravaged by the disease.

It’s the grandmothers in African communities who are keeping everything afloat, Lippa said.

“There’s a whole generation of mothers and fathers who have died of AIDS, so these grandmothers age 70 and up are waking up every morning figuring out how to feed and send 20 children to school,” she said.

“They are doing everything in their power.”

While African countries face unique challenges with cultural roadblocks and medications, Canada is also struggling to get a handle on the disease.

The number of people living with HIV in Canada is increasing.

According to a national survey, an estimated 75,500 Canadians were living with HIV at the end of 2014. That represents an increase of 6,700 people since 2011.

Of persons living with HIV, an estimated 52,220 were diagnosed, 39,790 were on antiretroviral therapy, and 35,350 had suppressed viral load.

An estimated 80 per cent of persons living with HIV were diagnosed, 76 per cent of persons diagnosed with HIV were on treatment, and 89 per cent of persons on treatment had suppressed viral load.