Kyrgyz Sex Trade Flourishes
Kubat Otorbaev
Publications in Kyrgyzstan are packed with
ads designed to lure the naïve into sexual slavery - "attra ctive girls wanted
for well-paid work abroad", "beautiful women sought as dancers", "get
married through the internet".
Olga answered such an ad. "I was still 19 but had to support my
little boy and disabled mother," she said. "I heard it was possible to earn a
lot of money in the United Arab Emirates, so I decided to go there.
"I had to go with up to 30 men a day, but I got no money. After a
month, I was arrested and put in prison. Four months later, I was deported back to
Bishkek. I came home with nothing."
Olga's story is typical. Women like her are lured by the promise of
earning good money. They're given fake passports, transported abroad and effectively sold
into sexual slavery. They're obliged to work as prostitutes, often catering for dozens of
men every day.
Experts attending a seminar last month on human-trafficking in
Kyrgyzstan concluded the problem has reached a disastrous proportions, with traffickers
preying on vulnerable young women and children, many of whom unwittingly end up trapped in
the sex industry.
"While abroad I managed to accumulate $10,000, but I had to pay
$7,000 for my freedom," said Irina. Another girl, Nurgul, complains that when she
came home all she had was "a leather jacket, shoes and some photos".
The business brings enormous profits to the traffickers. Some reports
estimate "slave traders" earn $30,000 to $40,000 per "commodity",
providing them with plenty of cash to circumvent immigration laws, pay off police and
customs officials.
The number of women enticed by the pimps is rising rapidly. The
majority are taken to Kazakstan, Russia, Estonia, the Caucasus, the United Arab Emirates,
Turkey, China and Germany. But there have also been reports of Kyrgyz women working in
India, Iran, Malaysia, Sweden, Qatar and Greece.
Children too are falling victim. In 1999, 154 Kyrgyz children were
reported missing and are thought to have been sent overseas. Not all of them end up in the
sex industry. Many are used as cheap labour or even as organ transplant donors. Babies are
sometimes sold to rich childless couples desperate for kids of their own.
Marat Sultanov, chairman of the Pervomaiski district court in Bishkek,
says special emphasis needs to be given to the young, especially homeless and unsupervised
children. "There are more and more such children, who do not attend school, live in
cellars and markets and do not have adults looking out for them," he said.
According to the British-based charity, Save the Children, ten per cent
of prostitutes - between 2,000 and 2,500 in Bishkek alone - are under 18.
Fear of AIDS has boosted demand for virgins. The younger the girl, the
more clients are prepared to pay. In the United Arab Emirates, for example, clients pay
between $300 and $500 for a night with a virgin.
With the Bishkek government either unwilling or unable to tackle the
problem, a number of international organisations and NGOs have sought to do so.
The latter point out that while the government has signed 11
international conventions related to the problem of human-trafficking, two treaties
concerning the rights of those travelling abroad in search of work have yet to be
ratified.
Sultanov notes the republic has virtually no legal precedent for
prosecuting individuals for crimes related to human-trafficking. "In the criminal
code, there is no such notion as 'trading in humans,' he said.
According to the justice ministry, there was one case in 1999 where
trafficking suspects were charged, but it was dropped for reasons that remain unclear. The
year before, 19 people were convicted for trading in children.
Parliamentary deputy Kubat Baibolov argues reforming the law is not the
answer. "We should revive the economy and improve people's lives," he said.
" Huge work is also needed in bringing up the young generation. We should educate
these youngsters against searching for a quick and easy way to get rich."
To date, there is no precise information on the number of women taken
abroad to work in the sex industry. The authorities report that 8,367 left the country in
1999, but there is no way of knowing how many ended up as slave labour or prostitutes.
Life in Kyrgyzstan is extremely hard, especially for women. They make
up the vast majority of the unemployed. And even prostitution is becoming less and less
lucrative. The growing number of prostitutes has increased competition, fees are falling
and the lifestyle is becoming more dangerous.
Life is even worse for the foreign sex slaves who return to Kyrgyzstan,
deeply traumatised and unable to trust a soul.
IWPR, 1 June 2001
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