Asia Times Onlinebanner
June 22, 1999atimes.com
Search buttonLetters buttonEditorials buttonMedia/IT buttonAsian Crisis buttonGlobal Economy buttonBusiness Briefs buttonOceania buttonCentral Asia/Russia buttonIndia/Pakistan buttonKoreas buttonJapan buttonSoutheast Asia buttonChina buttonFront button







Southeast Asia

Together, sex workers speak with louder voice
By Debra Boyce

PHNOM PENH - Seeking refuge from her abusive husband and rejected by her family, Tia fled her rural home for the anonymity of Phnom Penh, ending up in the Cambodian capital's largest red light district with a new life as a sex worker. Two weeks later, she was badly beaten by a client. In her tiny room she nursed her bruises, swollen lip and black eye, feeling completely alone. ''There was no one I could talk to,'' said the demure 28-year-old Tia,eyes fixed on a spot on the wall. ''I knew nothing about HIV and I wasvery worried about that. I didn't know how I was going to survive this place."

Determined that other women in the Tuol Kok red light district not feelthe same isolation, Tia and a handful of other sex workers decided theneigborhood needed a formal organization where women could go and discusstheir problems with their peers. The result was the Cambodian Prostitutes' Union. Since its doors opened in January, its senior members have divided their time between outreachwork in neighborhood brothels and support services for women who drop byto chat. While the union has attracted the support of nearly 200 members, brothelowners are less than pleased with its presence.

And although it has so far not been subjected to harassment, the latestwave of police crackdowns on the commercial sex industry is driving manyunion members underground or to other parts of the city. But if the fledgling organization survives, Cambodian women's rights advocates say it will gradually help these women learn their basic rights even in an industry many look down upon.

''The union works really well,'' noted Kien Sereyphal, director of theCambodia Women's Development Association, which offers the union adviceand financial assistance. ''Before [the women] felt powerless, felt isolated from society. Nowthey are starting to talk. The girls they realize must join together toprotect their rights,'' Sereyphal explained.

The union's office is housed in one half of a wooden house on one ofTuol Kok's busiest roads, nearly indistinguishable from the brothels thatsurround it on all sides. On Friday mornings, members, adorned with make-up and jewelry, crowd into a sparsely furnished one-room office that is decorated with newspaperarticles and posters depicting how HIV is transmitted. The dozen seniormembers lead discussions on health care, particularly HIV and AIDSprevention, and human rights.

''First you talk about HIV,'' said Chan Dina, a 24-year-old sex workerwho was first sold to a brothel at the age of 15. ''Step by step you bring uphuman rights. That they have the same rights as people who are not [in thesex industry]. The same rights as men. Many of the women don't realize this."

On non-meeting days, Chan Dina and the other peer educators fan outinto the brothels, armed with literature on safe sex. While other aidagencies visit Tuol Kok to talk about HIV with the sex workers, Chan Dinabelieves the message is more accepted coming from fellow sex workers. ''The union is very important,'' she opined. ''Other organizations might come here for an hour or two, but we are here all the time and are their peers. They are comfortable with us."

With an estimated 40 percent of the country's sex workers HIV-positive,AIDS awareness is a priority for the union's members. But AIDS is not the only threat. Women come to meetings with tales of beatings and abuse. Brothel owners frequently accuse the women of not earning enough money and punish them by forcing them to work around theclock or locking them up with out food, says Tia. Although the union cannot offer the women physical protection, she says, it encourages them to keep a record of their earnings as a smallmeasure of protection.

Although more attention has been focused in recent years on the plightof Cambodia's sex workers, Kien Sereyphal says there has been nomeasurable improvement in their lives, mainly because their number hascontinued to grow. Cambodia's commercial sex market has exploded since the country tradedcommunism for a free market and multi-party democracy in the early 1990s. Tuol Kok mushroomed with the United Nations peace-building mission, drawing women like Chan Dina, who left her brothel in a northern Cambodian town and came to Tuol Kok during preparations for the 1993 election.

Some of the women were sold into prostitution by friends or relatives,others enticed by traffickers with lures of fictitious jobs. Activistsestimate a third of all sex workers are below the age of 18. Although there is a law against trafficking, which includes penalties of 10 to 20 years imprisonment for pimps and brothel owners, it is not seriously enforced.

When the women and girls are beaten, little is done by authorities. Last year a brothel owner in northwest Cambodia beat a sex worker to death in front of witnesses, but a court dismissed the case, activists say, because the brothel owner was protected by military authorities.

''The recognition of women's rights is not strong yet,'' acknowleged KienSereyphal. ''It's written down in the constitution, yes. But implementation, no, not yet. We have to change the attitude in society.'' Kien added, ''Just because they work in prostitution they are still human beings and we must support them to protect and exercise their rights.'' Tuol Kok brothel owners are afraid that learning about their rights will encourage the girls to run away or hurt their profits, says Kien.

Privately, one government official has accused the Cambodia Women'sDevelopment Association of using the union to block the government fromclosing down brothels, says Kien Sereyphal. Although she has not spoken out against the crackdowns, she does not believe they are the solution. ''When the brothel is open we can reach the girls so they can get an education and can protect themselves,'' Kienexplained. ''If they are closed down they will just go underground, the [sexworkers] won't come to us and we can't get any information to them,'' shepointed out. ''If we can't talk to them, AIDS will continue to spread quickly."

(Inter Press Service)



Front | China | Southeast Asia | Japan | Koreas | India/Pakistan | Central Asia/Russia | Oceania

Business Briefs | Global Economy | Asian Crisis | Media/IT | Editorials | Letters | Search/Archive


back to the top

©1999 Asia Times Online Co., Ltd.
hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms hotels in Bangkok, Bangkok hotels, cheap thailand hotels cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, airline tickets vacation package, vacation packages, discount cruise, cheap cruise, discount cruises, cheap cruises discount airline ticket, discount airline tickets, cheap airline tickets alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental, car rental, cheap car rental airline tickets, southeast asia news, asia news, asian news car rental, car rentals, cheap car rental, cheap car rentals, discount car rental, discount car rentals car rental, car rentals, cheap car rental, cheap car rentals, discount car rental, discount car rentals car rental, car rentals, cheap car rental, cheap car rentals, discount car rental, discount car rentals,alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental car rental, car rentals, cheap car rental, cheap car rentals, discount car rental, discount car rentals alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental, car rental, cheap car rental vacation package, vacation packages discount airline tickets, cheap car rental, discount car rental cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms car rental, cheap car rental, alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental, car rental, cheap car rental cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, airline tickets airline tickets, cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, airline tickets alamo car rental, hertz car rental, avis car rental, sears car rental, car rental, cheap car rental
Southeast Asia Sex News | Asian Sex Gazette