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Prostitution ordeal of Iraqi girls
December 3, 2007 - (BBC) With their bright neon signs and glitzy
decor, dozens of nightclubs line the streets of the Maraba district
in the Syrian capital Damascus.
It's here that men come from far and wide - car number plates are
not just from Syria but Iraq and Saudi Arabia - to watch young women
dancing.
Most of the dancers are teenagers
and many of them are Iraqi refugees. They dance for the cash which
gets tossed onto the stage. The dancers are surrounded by bodyguards,
to stop them being touched by the men. But the guards also arrange
for their charges to be paid for sex with members of the audience.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi refugees have moved to Syria and
Jordan during the past four years, escaping the violence and instability
that followed the US-led toppling of Saddam Hussein.
Women supporting families face the greatest challenge.
The Syrian authorities and aid agencies do not know the exact numbers,
but many of the women say they have little choice but to work in
places like Maraba.
Lost innocence
Rafif is an innocent-looking 14-year-old, her long hair tied in
a pony tail. She seems barely to understand the enormity of the
crisis she is living.
"I have three sisters who are married and four brothers. They
are all in Baghdad. I am here with my mother and young brother only.
None of my family know what I do here."
Banned from doing regular work in Syria, she says their money ran
out and her mother started looking for other means to survive.
She says she makes about $30 a night at the clubs, but when men
take her to private villas she makes $100. She won't say what she
must do to earn this money.
"A woman came and spoke to my mother, who agreed to send me
to these places. We needed the money.
"I have already been arrested for prostitution and sent back
to Iraq, but I came back with a false passport."
Not all sex workers went into the industry by choice. Nada, 16,
says was dumped by her father at the Iraq-Syria border after her
cousin "took away my virginity".
Five Iraqi men took her from the
border to Damascus, where they raped her and sold her to a woman
who forced her to work in nightclubs and private villas.
She is now waiting at a government protection centre to be deported
back to Iraq.
Exploitation
The government says police have arrested Iraqi girls as young as
12 working as prostitutes in the nightclubs.
"We are coming across increasing numbers of women who do not
manage to make ends meet and are therefore more vulnerable to exploitative
situations such as prostitution," says Laurens Jolles of the
UN refugee agency.
"Intimidation and shame means the numbers of trafficking victims
and sex industry workers in Syria may never be known by government
or aid agencies."
Women picked up by the police are sent to protection centres, which
they frequently escape from, or are sent to prison.
"Immediately after we get to them, or sometimes before, they
are bailed out of prison, often by the same people who probably
forced them into prostitution," says Mr Jolles.
Many of the young women who leave Iraq hoping for an easier, safer
existence find what is in some ways an even tougher life in Syria.
At an age when life should just be beginning, Iraqi teenagers like
Nada feel they have reached a dead end.
"Now they will send me back to Iraq, I have no-one there and
in any case I am afraid for my life. I have no hope leaving here.
I have told the government I don't want to go back. My family has
abandoned me."
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7119473.stm
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