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PROSTITUTES SEEK FUNDS TO START
ALTERNATIVE BUSINESSES
August 25, 2003 (IRIN) Forty prostitutes,
who on Saturday completed three days of training in small business
management, are seeking funds to launch alternative revenue-generating
activities, Claudia Yetina, the chairwoman of the prostitutes' association
in the Central African Republic, told IRIN.
Yetina, a 30-year-old divorced mother of five who chairs the Association
des filles libres de Centrafrique contre le Sida, said the prostitutes
had learnt a lot from the training and were keen on engaging in
business.
"Each prostitute was put together with an experienced trader
for three days," Paul Mbelenga, the chairman of the Reseau
Centrafricain des Wali (female) and Koli (male) Gala (market) contre
le Sida, an association of market traders against HIV/AIDS, told
IRIN on Monday.
He said the first day of training comprised observation followed
by two days of practice by the trainers, who worked together with
grocery, meat, fish, fruit and clothes traders.
"The lady who trained me showed me she organises her expenses
and generates her incomes, and it was very attractive," Yetina
said.
She added that with 500,000 francs CFA (US $900), she would be able
to start a new life selling clothes in a shop.
The project targeting prostitutes is supported by the UN Development
Programme (UNDP), which in August 2001 signed a $1.14-million six-year
agreement with the government to fight HIV/AIDS through education
and campaigns.
An official of the UNDP anti-HIV/AIDS programme, Bertin Gustave
Niakamatchi, told IRIN on Monday that the programme sponsored revenue-generating
activities for 141 prostitutes in March 2002 in the capital, Bangui,
100 in Bouar, 454 km northwest of Bangui, and 100 in Berberati,
186 km west of Bangui.
"The operation was a success as many prostitutes converted
themselves into traders," Niakamatchi said. He said that instead
of starting businesses, some prostitutes had wasted their money.
Yetina said that as a result of the programme, many former prostitutes
were prospering, and "some even got married". She said
each had received about 50,000 francs CFA to start revenue-generating
activities.
Mbelenga said that with 50,000 francs invested in the grocery business,
one could make up to 5,000 francs profit daily, while with 300,000
francs invested in clothes business could earn a trader a monthly
profit of to 50,000 francs.
"We want to change our strategy by giving funds to experienced
traders who would then employ and pay prostitutes," Niakamatchi
said.
Created in June 2002, the Association des filles libres de Centrafrique
contre le Sida has about 400 members in Bangui. Yetina said the
association had been educating other prostitutes in bars, nightclubs
and other places about AIDS prevention.
A study by the Pasteur Institute in December 2002 showed that 14.8
percent of the CAR's 3.5 million people were HIV-positive, making
the nation the most affected in the subregion.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200308250645.html
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