Monday, January 30, 2012

South Africa's leading HIV group has warned that large numbers of faulty condoms are in circulation in the Bloemfontein area, despite a recall

The problem with the condoms was discovered after people complained to the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC). Health authorities have recalled that more than one million condoms were handed out ahead of the recent African National Congress centenary celebrations. They say that they are still investigating claims that the condoms are porous. A batch of 8,700 boxes - which all bore the South African Bureau of Standards stamp - were delivered to guesthouses, hotels, restaurants and bars before the ANC celebrations. The Free State Health Department says that it is recalling the estimated 1.35 million condoms as a precautionary measure - and urged the public not to panic. But TAC's Sello Mokhalipi said that condoms "are still out there in large numbers and that is of great concern to us". "The complaints are that the condoms broke during intercourse," he said. TAC says it conducted its own investigation using some of the condoms that had been handed out for the centenary celebrations and found them to be porous. "When you poured water in them, the water seeped through," Mokhalipi said. Free State Health Department spokesperson Jabu Mbalula said that the health authority could neither confirm nor deny that the condoms are faulty until it has concluded its own tests on the recovered condoms. The last major recall of condoms in South Africa was in August 2007 when 20 million were recalled after hundreds of thousands were found to be faulty. South Africa has one of the highest infection rates of HIV - the virus that causes AIDS - in the world.

2 comments:

rjp said...

When you have people like Free State Health Department spokesperson Jabu Mbalula making and testing condoms, what else do you think you'll get?

AnalogMan said...

It's all good... I used to have high hopes for AIDS, but as a method of genocide it's just not shaping up. Still, every little bit helps.

I was born in Bloemfontein. We used to have a siren that sounded every night at 8:45 and 9:00 p.m. After the second siren, all blacks had to be off the streets. Good times.