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Mashiri is 42 years old and was diagnosed HIV positive in 2006. He started treatment that same year. Duduzile is 40 years old and was diagnosed with HIV in 2007. They met and fell in love after meeting at an HIV community support group at Epworth, on Harare’s outskirts, in 2015.
Mashiri is 42 years old and was diagnosed HIV positive in 2006. He started treatment that same year. Duduzile is 40 years old and was diagnosed with HIV in 2007. They met and fell in love after meeting at an HIV community support group at Epworth, on Harare’s outskirts, in 2015.
© Rachel Corner/De Beeldunie

Surviving AIDS in Zimbabwe

Mashiri is 42 years old and was diagnosed HIV positive in 2006. He started treatment that same year. Duduzile is 40 years old and was diagnosed with HIV in 2007. They met and fell in love after meeting at an HIV community support group at Epworth, on Harare’s outskirts, in 2015.
© Rachel Corner/De Beeldunie
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In the late 1990’s, and at the height of the Aids epidemic, Zimbabwe was one of the countries worst hit. At its peak in 2000, over 30 per cent of the population was HIV positive, many without access to even basic treatment.