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Unveiling
Iraq's teenage prostitutes
By Joshua E. S. Phillips
Fleeing their war-torn homes, Iraqi
girls are selling their bodies in Syria to support their families.
June 24, 2005 (SALON) - In Syria you might not even
notice the Manara nightclub if it weren't for the gradual flow of
cars leading right to it. Just behind the Mosque of President Hafez
Assad, the club's parking lot is crammed with cars, many bearing
plates from neighboring gulf states. Inside, disco lights pierce
the smoky air. Patrons pack the seats as they sip beer and lazily
gaze at the dance floor. They watch teenage girls dressed in snug,
revealing clothes awkwardly shuffling to thumping Arabic music.
Many girls wear stilettos so steep they can barely walk. Some dance
in pairs, often tightly pressed together, fingers entwined. Most
seem bored and some, noticeably, are uneasy.
Male customers summon waitstaff to inquire about the availability
and age of select girls. A Syrian journalist and I, posing as patrons,
consult the staff ourselves. Farah, a 15-year-old, is brought to
our table, dressed in camouflage pants and heavy makeup.
Farah sits, swings her long dark hair, shakes hands all around,
then pointedly asks, "Who am I speaking to?" I'm taken
aback by her businesslike tone and point to the Syrian reporter.
Farah pleasantly chats with him, negotiating how much time she'll
share, and if a "next step" will be taken. Farah locks
eyes with the waiter, nods, and a bottle of champagne is brought
to our table. "That'll be 7,000 Syrian pounds," says the
waiter. That's $140. The champagne signals the beginning of the
process. Conversation is next, and "anything else" will
cost more.
As we empty our bottle of champagne, Farah tells us her story. Like
most of the girls at the Manara disco, she is an Iraqi, a Sunni
from Fallujah, one of Iraq's most war-torn areas. She got married
in the United Arab Emirates, divorced four months afterward, and
found work at the disco through a cousin. She says she's working
"just to make some money for my family," who also now
live in Syria. Farah says she's the family's breadwinner.
The story of a Sunni girl from Fallujah selling herself in a Damascus
nightclub represents startling new fallout from the Iraq war, one
human rights organizations and experts are only beginning to address.
An increasing number of young Iraqi women and girls who fled Iraq
during the turmoil are turning to prostitution in Syria, although
there are no reliable statistics on how many girls are involved.
That might partly explain why so little reporting has been done
on the topic. For journalists and human rights workers, securing
contact with Iraqi sex workers in Syria is difficult and dangerous
because the topic is taboo.
It's a serious problem because there are young girls doing this
-- 11, 12, 13 years old," says Abdelhamid El Ouali, the representative
for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees who's based in Damascus.
"It's amazing at first. But when you fight for your life, what
are you going to do?"
The Syrian government and UNHCR put the number of
Iraqi refugees in Syria at roughly 700,000. Syrian police either
lack data or won't release any figures on prostitution, which isn't
surprising considering the closed government. The U.S. State Department's
2005 "Trafficking in Persons Report" acknowledges the
problem, but officials have no clear sense of its magnitude. According
to the report, "There have been some reports that indicate
Iraqi women may be subjected to sexual exploitation in prostitution
in Syria at the hands of Iraqi criminal networks, but those reports
have not been confirmed."
Of course, nearly every conflict breeds prostitution. Despair leads
to desperation, which can often lead to sex work. Whether Iraqi
girls have actually been "trafficked" is hard to determine
for myriad reasons, not the least of which is that coercion is difficult
to gauge. "You could say this situation isn't triggered by
trafficking -- trafficking just takes advantage of the situation,"
El Ouali says.
That Iraqi girls and women are selling sex may not seem shocking,
but prostitution is especially taboo for Arab women. "In this
culture, to allow your daughter to become a prostitute means you've
hit dirt bottom," says Joshua Landis, an American professor
from the University of Oklahoma, presently living in Syria. "None
of your sisters can get married if it's known that one of them is
a prostitute. If there's any public knowledge of this, it's a shame
on the whole family." The shame can even lead to "honor
killings," in which women are slain by their husbands or relatives
for tainting the family name.
Hustling has a particularly violent legacy in Iraq. In 2000, Saddam
Hussein publicly executed 200 women convicted of prostitution. Prostitution
would be especially shameful in Farah's hometown, as Fallujah is
considered one of Iraq's more tribal, religiously conservative cities.
"Yes, even Sunnis from Fallujah are doing this kind of work,
and it reflects the drama of the situation," El Quali says.
"It's provoked by misery and precariousness."
Syria has traditionally allowed relaxed entry to its Arab neighbors.
Many arrived because of rampant, indiscriminate violence back home,
while others, like thousands of Iraqi Christians, had been targeted
by opposing ethnic or religious sects. Some feared they were "marked"
for working with foreigners, mainly Americans, either in the Coalition
Provisional Authority or the military, as translators or interrogators.
But with the exception of Palestinians, refugees are not officially
allowed to hold jobs in Syria. For the most part, Iraqi refugees
are living off their savings, which are drained by daily expenses.
Many are stuck in Syria, as few Western embassies are now granting
visas, claiming that Iraq has become a liberated country following
the fall of Saddam. With economic conditions worsening all the time
for refugees, officials say, it's no surprise that Syria is seeing
a rise in child exploitation and prostitution.
Koumay Mulhem, a young Syrian journalist, has been researching Iraqi
prostitution in Syria for a year as a reporter for an online women's
magazine, and is preparing to make a documentary about it. Mulhem
serves as my tour guide of sorts one recent Friday night as I try
to get a sense of how widespread Iraqi prostitution is here.
Our first stop is Martyrs' Square, the center of Damascus. With
the Damascene charm of Middle Eastern nut and juice shops, Al-Merjeh,
as it is locally known, is somewhat reminiscent of New York's Times
Square of the 1980s: seedy side streets, a plethora of one-star
hotels, and pimps. Within minutes, Mulhem locates a pimp, a shoeshine
boy, and quickly begins bartering with him.
"I have farfourd," says the pimp, using the slang for
very young girls. "Fifteen years old."
"I need younger," Mulhem says.
"Yes, we can find them. Iraqi girls. The cleanest you can find.
You'll never see anything like these girls. They'll make you very
happy."
"How much?"
"Since you're more than one 1,500 Syrian pounds [$30]."
Mulhem balks. The demonstration is over, and so he breaks the deal
and walks away. "Two minutes," he says, a terse commentary
on how easy it was to transact a deal.
Mulhem says that Al-Merjeh has long been a place to find pimps,
even before the influx of Iraqis. It's a transit point for taxi
drivers, who transport men to prostitutes in suburban apartments
in Jeramana, Berze and Sayeda Zainab (these districts house many
Iraqi Christians, Kurds and Shiites, respectively). "Prostitution
is flourishing in these areas," Mulhem says. "I'm a resident
of Jeramana and there's a new place for prostitution within my own
building."
He notes that Russian and Moroccan sex workers operated in Syria
during the mid-1990s. A comparatively smaller influx of Iraqi prostitution
came after Operation Desert Storm, but "since the last Gulf
War, there has been a flood that everybody has felt."
At the square we hop into a taxi. Just after we state our destination,
the cab driver begins soliciting us. He tells us about girls in
"furnished apartments" in the suburbs and offers us a
room "with a 16 year-old maid. You will see something you'll
never believe," he says.
We decline and head to Rabwah, a neighborhood with about 20 clubs
mostly with Syrian and Moroccan sex workers, but now with more Iraqis,
Mulhem says. Before entering one, Mulhem pulls me aside. "These
places are dangerous," he says. "Don't speak English.
You're Turkish now, OK?" An American presence would arouse
too much suspicion, he says, as locals are the expected patrons.
In one club, girls in low-cut halter tops walk hand in hand along
a fashion runway-like platform. Blaring music makes conversation
impossible and so we decide to leave. As we do, a man joins us to
help us find "the right club." We hail a cab and head
to the upscale neighborhood Mezza. We end up at the Manara nightclub,
where I met Farah weeks ago. This is the place, our companion says,
where the best Iraqi girls are found, and their youth is a premium.
This time the girls are more aggressive. As soon as we sit down,
four instantly arrive at our table, squeezing in tightly, knitting
their hands into ours. Alia and Noura sit beside our Syrian hotographer,
who turns to them and asks why two are presenting themselves to
him.
"She's my sister," says Alia, who says she's 18 but looks
much more like 14. "We always go together."
"Where are you from?"
"Baghdad."
"Did you bring your sister here?"
"No, my mother brought us," says Alia, suddenly looking
a bit sullen.
"Do you like your mother?" our photographer asks.
"Of course," she answers, slightly defensive. "Now
you have to choose between me and my sister."
Sitting beside Mulhem is Dana, who says she's from the "jihad
neighborhood of Baghdad," but doesn't name the district. He's
trying to negotiate a way to spend time with her to talk about her
experience and how she landed the work.
"How much time would you spend with me? What are you going
to do?" he asks.
"I'll make you happy in any way you want," Dana says.
But first she has to check with her brother, seated just behind
Mulhem, about prices and availability. They agree on $100 and a
rendezvous tomorrow afternoon (Mulhem doesn't show up). The deal
is closed and our evening winds down unless we decide to do more
business. We decline. The girls are disappointed and we head out
in the night.
As we stroll alongside the Mosque of President Hafez Assad, Mulhem
tries to calculate the number of prostitutes in Damascus. There
were about 40 girls in the Manara nightclub, he says. Now multiple
that number by approximately 120 clubs and you have a pretty good
estimate. Streetwalkers constitute a smaller number, and who knows
how many prostitutes operate in "furnished apartments."
As we continue walking down the windy street, Mulhem grows reflective.
Referring to Dana, he says, "She's just a child. They're all
just children."
One outreach organization for refugee children is the Good Shepherd
Nunnery in Damascus' crumbling Old City. The nuns' observations
of Syrian prostitution mirror Mulhem's, but they have also met a
few Iraqi women in local prisons who've been sold into bondage by
their husbands. Mostly, says Sister Mary Claude Naoldaf, "the
girls tell me they don't like it but have to do it to support their
families."
She adds that in the past year, many of the children that attended
nunnery's learning center have "suddenly disappeared"
-- most likely taken out of school, she believes, to earn for their
families. Her colleague, Sister Therese Mosalam, explains that "to
help prevent girls from turning to prostitution, the center offers
them computer training courses and helps find them jobs in sewing
and gold-manufacturing factories." But pay is usually about
$50 a month $100 in the best case compared with the $40 to $60 sex
workers can make per night. "And the job opportunities are
very rare," she adds. "I had one girl who waited for three
years for the factory job."
The sisters' voices drop as they quietly recall visits to refugee
families' homes. Empty refrigerators are common. Some kids have
yellowish skin and many look gaunt. Malnutrition, they say, is starting
to take hold.
Mouna Kurdy, general manager of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, which
works in affiliation with the UNHCR, acknowledges that among Iraqi
refugees, "parents don't have enough to eat, so they encourage
their children to take these jobs."
She grows testy at recent inquiries by the press and humanitarian
groups about Iraqi prostitutes in Syria. "And now people are
asking about this issue? [The international community] was preparing
this war for months. Now that Saddam Hussein isn't here anymore,
the problems are supposed to be finished. No. They have been here
before the war, during the war, and after the war."
"Somalian and Sudanese worked as prostitutes in Syria, but
nobody cared about that," says Abdul Aziz Taha, who's in change
of a Red Crescent health clinic in the Damascus suburbs.
Both Taha and Kurdy says that prostitution is a comparatively small
worry in light of the basic health problems that Iraqi refugees
face, including hepatitis C, diabetes and serious cardiac conditions.
Major medical procedures cost on average $2,000, but the Red Crescent
is only given a budget of $200 per family, Kurdy says.
Still, given the growing awareness of the problems facing Iraqi
refugees violence, restricted mobility, diminishing finances one
wonders why child prostitution in Syria hasn't garnered more attention.
The answer might depend on whom you ask. To Mulhem, it's profitable
for Syria as a tourist attraction. He believes "there's active
collaboration between the club owners and police who turn a blind
eye for payoffs." Landis, the American professor in Syria,
says that if Syria publicly acknowledged prostitution, that would
"mean sanctioning its existence" and expose the country
to the sort of shame that an individual family would face.
In fact, Syria newspapers typically replace the word "prostitution"
with the euphemistic " act against decency." Talk of drugs,
HIV and religion is actively discouraged some would say ensored
by the Syrian authorities. And despite numerous inquires, no Iraqi
women's organization would respond to questions about this issue.
But the emergence of Iraqi prostitution in Syria, especially among
young girls, reflects the dire conditions of the local Iraqi refugee
community. One U.N. official, who asked to remain anonymous, admits
that the "conspiracy of silence" surrounding prostitution
underscores the international community's larger failure to recognize
the dire conditions of Iraqi refugees and provide them with a safe
haven.
"Every social convention is splitting at the seams because
of the implosion of Iraqi society," Landis says. "That
place has been blown apart, so all the social barriers have collapsed."
From: http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2005/06/24/prostitutes/index_np.html
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