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SEX
SLAVE IN BOSNIA RECOUNTS HER ORDEAL
By
Nidzara Ahmetasevic, Sarajevo
March
18, 2003 (IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT) The Moldovan woman
is only 20, but she looks far older. "My boss paid a thousand
euro for me," she told IWPR in excellent Bosnian. "It
was just like buying a t-shirt - you turn it around, look it over
and if you like it, you buy. That's how it was with me."
Elena, not her real name, she shows no emotion as she speaks - as
if she has already accepted her fate.
Girls were sold for prices ranging from around 500 to 1,500 euro
the amount treated by their new pimps as a debt they then
had to repay through forced, or willing, prostitution.
The hours were long. "I had to work every night, " she
said. "The clients paid my boss 30 euro for an hour with me,
or 128 euro for a whole night. On Fridays or Saturdays I had as
many as 15 customers."
Elena is one of thousands who have experienced a similar fate. A
little over a year ago, she went to the West in hope of earning
money through prostitution but instead she was "sold"
and then smuggled into Bosnia-Herzegovina, where she was forced
to work in one of the country's numerous nightclubs.
She escaped, but then spent 20 days in detention for possession
of false documents. Upon her release, she was handed over to the
International Organisation for Migration, IOM. While waiting to
return home to Moldova, Elena lives in one of the body's six safe
houses scattered across the country.
Under IOM rules, she says, she cannot reveal her own name, or the
names of the people she worked for. Nor can she leave her safe house
unaccompanied.
According to non-governmental organisations, NGOs, and United Nations
experts, human trafficking appeared in Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1995,
at the end of the war. Women and girls, mostly from Eastern Europe,
but from Bosnia as well, were kidnapped or lured from home by the
promise of well-paid work.
But then they were treated as little more than sex slaves until
their supposed debts were paid off. Those who disobeyed the brothel
owners were beaten or even tortured.
With its porous frontier and poorly-regulated administration, police
and judiciary, Bosnia-Herzegovina became a safe haven for human
traffickers and pimps, whose customers included local police, foreign
peacekeeping troops and members of international organisations.
Tighter surveillance, increasingly frequent raids on bars and nightclubs,
strengthened border controls, and a vigorous campaign against trafficking
have combined to reduce the number of brothels in the past six months.
Even so, few traffickers have been convicted.
"Local corruption and the complicity of international officials
in Bosnia have allowed a trafficking network to flourish,"
the organisation Human Rights Watch, HRW, claimed in a recent report
on the problem.
Elena's story confirms the report's conclusion. She arrived in Bosnia
on April 4, 2002, to escape a life of poverty in her home country.
"A girlfriend had been to Bosnia and when she returned to Moldova
she told me she had worked as a waitress and that you could earn
good money there," she told IWPR.
She and her two younger sisters had suffered abject misery in their
homeland, as their mother was unemployed and their father alcoholic.
With only primary education qualifications, Elena had struggled
to find a job to support at least her sisters. Finally, she was
introduced to some people who promised to get her into Bosnia.
With fake Romanian papers, an ID card and a passport, Elena traveled
first to Romania, where she was held in a house with three other
girls. A few days later she was transported by boat to Belgrade,
where she was bought by a local criminal called Dragan.
"I was with several other girls in a house in Belgrade. Various
people came to inspect us. On some days, six or seven people came,"
she recalled.
"We presented ourselves in front of them with very few clothes
on. They would sit there and the five of us would stand in front
of them. When you went out there, you had to show what your breasts,
waist and hips looked like.
"You had to convince them you would attract customers for them.
They didn't take you if you had short hair. They watched out for
scars, bad teeth or evidence of slashed wrists, because some girls
do that. The new boss and the seller would then agree on a price."
Elena says she accepted her fate from the start. "All that
time I thought this had to happen," she said. "I had left
home for the first time and had tried to reach a place I didn't
know. I badly needed money."
Elena was then dispatched to Bosnia, smuggled across the river by
boat. The brothel-owner who had bought her from Dragan took her
documents and gave her a Bosnian ID card.
"I then shared a house with 15 girls from different countries,
including Romania, Bulgaria and Moldova. One was from Hungary,"
she said. " Some were younger and some older than me, and some
had no documents at all. The house had four rooms, and the bar where
we worked was a little further away. The boss kept his eye on us
all the time."
Elena says all sorts of customers patronised her bar, including
locals, soldiers from the NATO-led Stabilisation Force, SFOR, and
even local policemen.
"The police would come to the bar, pay and take us to a room.
The foreigners were just the same. Our boss always found out if
any of the girls had asked them for anything. It was a vicious circle,
because how could I ask people for help when they had paid my boss
to have sex with me?"
After almost a year Elena escaped, and she was eventually taken
to an IOM shelter. "The bar where we worked has closed,"
she said. "I don't know what happened to the boss and the girls.
I want to go home now."
But going home is not going to be easy. After they heard of her
fate, her family would not take her back. "When I called my
mother, I could not lie and I admitted I was a prostitute. She told
me I couldn't go back home." When she talks of her mother,
Elena's stony facade finally begins to crack.
Elena now plans to stay at a friend's place when she returns home
but is still worried about her future. "I'm scared of what
will happen to me when I get back," she said.
"First I have to obtain regular papers so I don't have problems
with the police. I want a husband and children. But I can never
tell my children what happened to me, as I don't want them to know
what their mother was like."
She holds herself partly to blame for her experience. "I did
try to leave and do things differently and that's why it all happened,"
she said. "People in Moldova are very poor, and it's difficult
to find a job and make ends meet there.
"I wanted to tell IWPR this because I feel better talking about
it. Some girls will never discuss it, but I think you only end up
crying more if you try to bottle it up and not tell anyone."
Nidzara Ahmetasevic is a freelance journalist from Bosnia.
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