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Sex work in the south
http://www.himalmag.com/2003/august/report.htm
A
detailed survey profiles the grey world of sex workers in
Madras
by
Syed
Ali Mujtaba
In recent times, prompted by the concern over
the spread of HIV/AIDS, commercial sex workers have been the
focus of a great deal of attention, primarily with the aim of
promoting safe sex as a method of preventing disease. Despite
the numerous groups active among sex workers, and despite the
government’s professed interest in the matter, there has
been no accurate assessment of the total number of people
practising the profession in India. Rough estimates suggest
that there are well over ten million sex workers in the
country, with the states of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh,
Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu being considered “high supply
zones”.
If matters related to the safety of sex work
and the rights of sex workers are to be addressed, it is
important first to know the extent of the industry, its
demography as well as the conditions of work. One of the most
systematic and coherent studies of the industry was recently
carried out in Madras, a city of about six million people and
the capital of Tamil Nadu, the state with the highest
incidence of HIV cases in the country.
Madras has a conservative profile unlike the
more cosmopolitan metros like Bombay, Delhi or Cal-cutta. But
as the HIV figures suggest, and as the survey confirms, the
conservative image is only a veneer behind which lurk many
clandestine transactions. The survey conducted by the Indian
Community Welfare Organisation (ICWO), an NGO that has been
working with sex workers and the gay community in Madras for
close to 15 years, estimates that there are over ten thousand
commercial sex-workers in Madras. The ICWO survey actually
maps 6300 of these sex workers in the city.
The survey updates the 1992 figures of the
World Health Organi-sation (WHO) which had then identified
3000 sex workers in Madras. The secretary of the ICWO AJ
Hari-haran, who was part of the WHO survey, says the Madras
sex industry stands on four pillars — sex workers, clients,
brokers and the law enforcing agencies. According to him it is
a chicken and egg syndrome where it is difficult to say who
surfaces first in the cycle of sex work. The ICWO conducts
general health camps once in three months where sex workers
are treated for STDs. According to him Madras needs 11,111
condoms a day, or 40,55515 condoms annually.
Categories of sex workers
The ICWO survey focuses on the attitude, behaviour and
practice of commercial sex workers in Madras and classifies
them into four categories. They are the family-based,
street-based, brothel-based and mobile sex workers.
Of the total sample of 6300 people, 4500
belong to the family category. People of this category live in
residential areas and operate from their homes often without
the know-ledge of anyone, including their neighbours. Run by
aged sex workers, with their own network of regular clients,
new entrants soliciting services come to these family
establishments only through special contacts and they are only
allowed admission after their identity has been fully
verified.
The street workers, who number about 1360,
are the next largest category. They get their clients by
waiting on the streets. Most of them carry on their work
independently, though some rely on brokers for help in getting
clients. The preferred method of work is to wait on crowd-ed
streets, which provides more custom as well as relative
anonymity to the transaction, as opposed to the less
frequented localities. Bus stops, railway stations, cinema
halls and beaches are the usual venues where the transaction
is negotiated, from where they go to cheap hotels and lodges
with their clients.
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Categories
of sex workers
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The third category consists of sex workers
are those who work in brothels. In the survey sample, 365
belong to this category. Madras does not have any distinctly
identifiable sex work localities, as there are in Bombay,Delhi
or Calcutta. However, there are brothels which function
discreetly and openly in the residential areas of the city.
Women from the latter segment of the trade work at fixed
establishments but those working at the former kind of
brothels change their addresses frequently. Both types of
brothels are heavily dependent on brokers for their clients.
The fourth category is made up of mobile sex
workers, who only number between 90 and110. They also depend
on brokers. Every evening, some five or six girls are taken
out in a car or a van by brokers on particular routes to visit
particular points. Typically these girls are sent to the
clients only on the basis of prior appointments. Certain
hotels and resorts in and around the city are closely
associated with this arrangement, since it forms part of their
hospitality services. Under this system, the hotels procure
the girls for their customers through brokers who even make
arrangements to transport them if needed. In this category of
the profession, the girls generally have a different profile
from those in the other categories. Most of their clients are
short-term business visitors to the city. Given the nature of
their clientele and the locales at which they provide services
they are expected to be more ‘polished’ and well dressed.
Consequently, their rates are higher.
The majority of the women in the profession
come from outside the state, with Andhra Pradesh accounting
for 53 percent. Next is Tamil Nadu, with 23 percent, while the
other two neighbouring states of Karnataka and Kerala account
for 14 and 10 percent. There is a fairly well-organised and
systematic method of recruiting the women into the city’s
sex trade. Most are picked up from regular conduit points in
the adjoining states at prices ranging from INR 100,000 to
300,000. Prices vary according to looks, according to a full
time broker named Kandasamy. The colour of skin is very
important, and dark skin is at a discount.
The arrangement
The relationship between the broker and the newly recruited
sex worker is governed by a contract. Brokers go periodically
to the recruitment points and procure girls on 37-day
contracts. The girls are paid 50 percent of the contracted sum
up front as an advance while the remaining dues are paid on
their return after the completion of the contract. For those
who are set up at brothels, owners provide breakfast and lunch
during their stay, while dinners are normally the clients’
responsibility. Though the sex workers are on contract for 37
days, they eventually end up getting paid for only 30 days.
Menstruation and travel time are cited as reasons for cutting
a week’s salary. Since regular clients are always on the
look-out for new faces, the brokers take one set of girls back
and return with a fresh set. There are, however, many who end
up staying back in the city after their contract expires for
lack of opportunities elsewhere and this is what accounts for
the large numbers of sex workers.
The number of working days is variable across
the different categories. Brothel-based sex workers have a
more demanding regimen since they work on all 30 days of the
calendar month. As a result they deal with the maximum number
of clients. Typically, since a sex worker attached to a
brothel has to work without a break through the year, she has
to cater to about 270 customers. On the other hand, for those
in the street-based, mobile and residential categories work is
relatively less demanding. On average, in a month they work
for roughly 22, 16 and nine days, respectively.
Earnings likewise are highly variable. The
highest income earners are those in the mobile category, whose
higher rates ensure an income of INR 6000 a month though they
work the least. Those who are attached to brothels earn in the
vicinity of INR 4000 for a full month’s work. The
residential and street-based women earn the least, having to
settle for average monthly incomes of INR 3000 rupees and 1500
respectively. Reportedly, and ex-pectedly, given that they
have the maximum degree of physical contact, those who work in
brothels belong to the medically high risk group.
For those who service clients outside their
homes or brothels, the preferred venue for the majority is the
client’s residence. Hotels and lodges are the next most
utilised places. As far as the residential category, brothel
and street sex worker categories are concerned, given the
clandestine nature of the work, there are frequent changes of
addresses and venues of transaction. Those attached to
brothels change their addresses most frequently, even as often
as once a month.
As far as clients are concerned, the majority
approach sex workers directly. At any given time, the majority
of them are new comers and only 30 percent are regulars.
Interestingly, only 22 percent of the clients stated that the
reasons for soliciting the services of sex workers was
“immediate satisfaction of the sexual urge”. Some 11
percent even claimed lack of domestic privacy, primarily the
presence of grown up children in crowded households.
The usual suspects
In the city, there are 150 full time sex brokers and 4500
part-timers. Brokers engage in two types of activity –
procuring girls for brothels and serving as intermediaries
between sex workers and clients. They get a 30 percent
commission from the brothel owners for the supply of girls,
besides a separate cut for bringing clients to the brothels.
Most of the part time brokers are drivers of auto-rickshaws
and taxis and rickshaw pullers, as well as tour and travel
trade operators, bartenders, waiters and even watchmen. Some
of them graduate from being brokers to full fledged brothel
owners.
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Madras
sex workers come from
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The entire sex industry in Madras, it is
said, flourishes under police protection, something not
entirely unbelievable given that many ‘prominent’
middle-men and brokers have been around in this business for
quite some time. Owners of brothels that function openly and
street sex workers pay a fixed amount of money to the police
to avoid arrest and harassment. Given this nexus between the
industry and the police, the latter periodically go through
the motions of brothel-busting and arrests, but only to meet
the requirement of the minimum number of ‘cases’. There is
a pattern to the arrests of sex workers. The street based
workers are arrested about twice a month, brothel-based
workers once a month, whereas those from the mobile and
residential categories are hauled up once in two months. Girls
caught in such raids are produced before a magistrate where
they pay a fine and after which they are set free.
The city police, however, is quick to
distance itself from such facts about the trade and its
unofficial connections with police personnel. A Joint
Commissioner of Police claims that the anti-vice squads have
been systematically working to eliminate ‘sex crimes’ in
the city. He also disagrees with the study’s estimate of sex
workers in Madras, claiming that the figures are much lower.
A choice or a compromise
Despite the precarious conditions of the work, the sex
profession continues to attract a steady stream of girls. Most
join the profession because of poverty and financial
obligations, mainly family debt. Others land into this
following failed marriage. In fact, as many as a third of the
respondent said they came into the profession because their
husbands had abandoned them. Social factors also have a role
to play, as is evident from the fact that 9 percent say they
entered the trade because their lovers had deserted them.
Significantly, the majority of sex workers
have primary education, are married, have children and are in
the 26-35 age group. Half of the respondents have a single
child, 41 percent have two, and 10 percent have three children
to look after. The women’s main priority is the child’s
future, and more than 75 percent do not want their children to
follow in their own footsteps. More than 30 percent wanted to
send their children to boarding schools while 14 percent
thought it safer to deposit them with relatives. Tragically,
however, more than one fifth are convinced that they will be
unable to stop their children from entering the profession.
The level of awareness about sexually
transmitted diseases is reasonably high, perhaps as a
consequence of the numerous HIV prevention programmes that
have been initiated. More than two thirds of the interviewees
are aware of being in a HIV high risk group. Fully 68 percent
of the sex workers reported regular condom use. The remaining
22 percent do not practice safe sex for various reasons, while
quite a few do not use con-doms because of misconceptions.
Some feel that they cannot contract HIV or other STDs because
they are clean and healthy and have regular medical check ups.
Others feel secure because they cater to regular clients whom
they believe to be healthy. Some believe that washing
themselves with soda immediately after every encounter ensures
safety. Then there are those who think that they are safe from
HIV because they do not do oral sex.
More such empirical surveys are required if
sex workers are to get even a semblance of the right to live
and work in conditions that are less hazardous and demanding.
Till then this one could serve as guide to policies that make
their life a shade more comfortable.
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