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BANGLADESH: DREAMS AND HUNGER
DRIVE WOMEN INTO INDIAN SEX TRADE
By Anindita Dasgupta
December 9, 2003 - (IPS/GIN) Thirty-year-old Safia
Begum, a domestic worker at a high-rise apartment in the upwardly
mobile Gulshan enclave of the Bangladeshi capital, has a little
secret.
Till last year, she had been a prostitute in a small border town
of India for as little as five rupees, or 16 U.S. cents for each
client.
She has a long cut mark on her left arm where one customer hit her
with a rod when she suggested that he use condoms. She has also
nearly lost sight in one eye when a drunken client hit her with
the broken end of a beer bottle.
Safia Begum rarely used a condom in her 12 years as a prostitute
in India. Even the cheapest condom sold for two rupees, or seven
cents, was too big a cost for a desperate business by desperate
Bangladeshi women smuggled across the Indian border by traffickers,
robbed of their money and left to fend for themselves in an alien
land.
She was only 18 years old when she was trafficked into India by
her father's younger sister, Hamida Bua, on the pretext of getting
her a good job in the north Bangladeshi border district of Kurigram.
Unknown to her, Safia had already changed hands several times over.
In course of a single night, Safia had become an illegal entrant
into India's north-eastern state of Assam, just a stone's throw
from Hamida Bua's home in Kurigram.
Safia's is not a unique story. At least 50 such Safia Begums are
lured and sold across the border every day in Bangladesh with false
offers of lucrative employment or marriage without dowry. The local
touts, commonly women, are relatively familiar with targets and
in many cases, even family members, neighbours or 'fake husbands'.
Much of the trafficking is, in fact, carried out with the unknowing
consent of the trafficked person herself, who believes that there
is a job or a husband at the end of the line. Some are thrust into
prostitution, others into pornography, sale of organs, or forced
beggary through use of
violence, threat of violence, or drugs.
With a low average per capita income of 225 U.S. dollars and a massive
labour surplus, Bangladesh is one of the largest migrant-exporting
countries in Asia.
Migration to the West and migrant for work in the Middle East and
South-east Asia are crucial poverty alleviation strategies for Bangladesh,
as the value of migrants' remittances is 30 percent or more of the
country's national income. There is also considerable irregular
migration into adjacent India, mostly illegal, and undertaken with
the help of middlemen in collusion with law enforcement agencies
on both sides.
The most extreme form of this irregular migration is sex trafficking,
particularly in women and children with dreams in their eyes and
hunger in their stomachs. Many would have not been eating more than
one meal a day back at the home village.
"Sometimes we did not eat any food during the whole day. I
thought if I worked, everybody could eat two meals a day,"
says 40-year-old Noor Banu by way of explanation, as she squatted
and mopped the white marble floor of her master's living room. "That
was how I fell into this trap."
"Extreme poverty, land fragmentation, floods, cyclones, landlessness
and demand for dowry are among the reasons that push out both men
and women of their ancestral homes to journey into the unknown,"
says Uttam Kumar Das, assistant professor of law at the Dhaka campus
of Queens University, who did his doctoral dissertation on sex trafficking
in South Asia.
The luckier ones, he says, manage to get regular jobs in garment
factories or other industries inside Bangladesh, while many others
become unwitting victims of trafficking to India or Pakistan.
India shares 4,222 kilometres of border with 28 districts of Bangladesh,
most of it open and with rivers running across. Thus, Bangladeshi
touts build up powerful bases in the border districts of India in
West Bengal and Assam, to the north and west, and these are now
favourite transit points of trafficked women.
Once in the hands of the procurers, the women are controlled through
threats of violence and solitary confinement. Some hotels or even
godowns are used to keep the women brought in from different parts
of the country through land or river routes. Later, they are smuggled
out across the border.
The ones that are trafficked by organised syndicates usually end
up in the brothels of Kolkata or Mumbai in India or even as far
south as Karachi in Pakistan. Those traded by unorganised traffickers
are sold just across the border for petty sums.
Prices vary according to age, 'beauty', skin colour and virginity.
According to a recently concluded study, the highest known price
for a Bangladeshi woman reported from the Pakistani city of Karachi's
'human bazaar' was 4,700 U.S. dollars.
The female touts earn about 10,000 to 50,000 takas (167 to 834 dollars)
for each victim while the traffickers earn anything from 50,000
to 500,000 takas (167 to 8,334 dollars) after sales. For many of
these women, the first sexual events begin with the traffickers
as well as border security personnel on either side of the border.
Once across into India, clueless and penniless, most trafficked
women have no option but to sell their bodies. The girls and women
are made to entertain clients ranging from five to 20 a day. It
does not take long for them to develop various sexually transmitted
diseases, especially HIV/AIDS.
Safia had to entertain about 12 customers in a 24-hour period. Often,
she would have to provide different kinds of sex several times a
day.
For her part, Ruma Bibi had to swallow a pill - which made her bleed
for seven days -- to get rid of her first unwanted pregnancy. The
second time, she said, she just pushed a sharp bamboo stick inside
her body and the baby was gone. "One of the girls in our house
died while doing that," she says.
These women were repeatedly threatened by their bosses that they
would be handed over to the Assam police on charges of being illegal
immigrants if they failed to cooperate.
For Safia and many others like her, the choice was between a jail
term and prostitution. They chose prostitution and hoped that someday
they would be able to go back home.
The trafficking of women across into border towns of India forms
one part of the larger issue of migration of Bangladeshis into India,
something that is not officially acknowledged by the Dhaka government
or discussed in polite society at the capital.
Even though there is an official ban on migration of unskilled women
from Bangladesh, this is honoured in its flouting. Given its sluggish
economy and inability to open up job opportunities at home, Bangladesh
does not have the capacity to re-absorb its own repatriated peoples.
The Indian government conveniently overlooks the great demand that
exists within its own borders for cheap labour from overpopulated
and labour-surplus Bangladesh, and treats all border crossers as
undocumented immigrants to be pushed back unceremoniously.
Safia Begum, Ruma Bibi and Noor Banu were among the lucky few who
managed to save a little money with which to bribe their way back
into Bangladesh. But upon their return, the women found that their
families did not want to take them in. The fear of scandal overcame
love of a sister, daughter or cousin.
Today the only homes they know are these beautiful apartments of
Dhaka's newly affluent, where they cook and wash, clean and mop
and try to forget those fearful memories. But all three hope that
some day their families will take them back.
From: http://globalinfo.org/eng/promo.asp?Key=33161905058
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