Recognition - awarded Best Documentary at the International Drugs and Harm Reduction Film Festival
April 23rd, 2009
INDONESIA: A Cleaner Fix (film)
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Photo: David Gough/IRIN Timotius Hadi (right) was a heroin addict for close to 10 years. But since testing positive for HIV in 2003 he has turned his life around and now supplies clean needles to injecting drug users
Update "A Cleaner Fix" has been awarded Best Documentary at the International Drugs and Harm Reduction Film Festival. IRIN Senior Editor for Asia, Brennon Jones, accepted the award in front of hundreds of delegates to the "Harm Reduction 2009" conference in Bangkok. The film was picked from a field of more than 70 entries. An e-mail from organisers said the award was a "real acknowledgement to the effort IRIN has undertaken to raise the profile of a subject matter through the medium of film."
Timotius Hadi is an accidental hero. In fact, many people wouldn’t consider him a hero at all – he was a heroin addict for close to 10 years and is the first to admit shame at some of the things he has done.
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But since testing positive for HIV in 2003, and somehow finding the courage to turn his life around, Hadi has become a pillar of the community in which he was once a scourge.
These days he is an outreach worker with an organisation called Karisma, and his job is to supply clean syringes to injecting drug users.
Founded by two former heroin addicts who met in a drug rehabilitation centre, Karisma runs a needle exchange programme in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta.
HIV/AIDS is a growing threat in the country and although the number of people infected is still relatively low – less than 0.25 percent of the population – Indonesia’s large community of injecting drug users has been devastated by the disease.
Across Indonesia there are an estimated 500,000 injecting drug users. As many as 70 percent of them are HIV positive.
Need a needle?
Photo: David Gough/IRINAlthough the number of people infected with HIV/AIDS is still relatively low in Indonesia, the country's large community of injecting drug users has been devastated by the disease
But, thanks to organisations like Karisma and people like Hadi, injecting drug users need never share or re-use needles, making them much less likely to contract, or spread, HIV.
Hadi’s only regret is that organisations like Karisma did not exist when he was using drugs – that way he might have avoided contracting HIV.
“I was 15 when I started using heroin,” he said. “At first I always used new needles but by 1998 I was sharing needles.
“I felt bad after getting the (HIV) result but afterwards I felt grateful, because if I hadn’t known my status then I’d be dead by now – I wouldn’t be a better person.”
Despite the very obvious risks of needle sharing, Hadi finds it hard to impress on his clients the need for regular HIV testing.
“It’s too much for me – I don’t want to know the result,” said Adi, 24, one of many clients Hadi has met at the local methadone clinic, where addicts are given a substitute drug to help wean them off heroin.
“One of my friends took the test, but when he got the result he was very depressed. At that time he had already stopped heroin but once he knew he was positive he started using again.
“Even though he’s married and has a one-year-old daughter, and even though he knows that there’s a very high risk of him being infected with HIV, Adi just doesn’t want to know.”
Sex, drugs and HIV
Photo: David Gough/IRINThanks to organisations like Karisma, injecting drug users need never share or re-use needles
It is a view shared by Yolanda, 28, a heroin addict who is also a sex worker.
“Of course I’m not brave enough to go for the test. What’s the point? It will just make me more stressed and depressed.”
Yolanda was introduced to heroin by a boyfriend. Although the relationship didn’t last long, she became addicted to the drug but could no longer afford it.
She was left with no choice but to start selling her body. Yolanda insists on using condoms but admits it is a rule she is not always able to enforce. The same is true of needles.
“I rarely share needles; we usually buy them, but sometimes we are forced to share. If that happens then I only share with friends, but even then we don’t now who’s infected and who isn’t.”
Hadi acknowledges that there is little chance of being able to persuade Yolanda to be tested for HIV. But, given time to win their trust, he has managed to persuade many of his 150-odd regular clients to go for a test.
Andri, a 27-year-old addict who tested positive for HIV a few years ago but is now off heroin, on methadone and seeking antiretroviral (ARV) treatment, is one of them.
“I heard about HIV by word of mouth,” said Andri, “but it was only talk – we kept on using. I only really understood the risk of HIV when I met Hadi.”
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