/ 24 June 2004

‘It’s better to die’

Young South African women are being given false job offers to lure them into prostitution in Macau, a former Portuguese colony now under Chinese control, says the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

IOM official Jonathan Martens told a three-day conference which opened in Benoni, near Johannesburg, on Tuesday that women were promised employment, luxury accommodation, and payment of between $10 000 and $20 000.

Their passports were confiscated once they arrived in Macau.

The meeting, entitled ‘Next Steps to Path Breaking Strategies in the Global Fight Against Sex Trafficking in South Africa’, has attracted over 100 participants.

Martens said South African traffickers earn around $500 for every woman recruited for prostitution in Macau, which has been labelled the “Las Vegas of Asia” for its numerous casinos and nightclubs. Drugs played a “very big role” in recruitment, he added.

A 23-year-old woman identified as Nicola reported to the IOM that she had met nine other black, white and mixed race South Africans aged 18 to 21 in Macau, who were forcefully prostituted in the former colony.

Addressing delegates in Benoni, Linda Smith — founder of the War Against Trafficking Alliance — described the ways in which the trafficking of women had become a global phenomenon.

“We found girls from South Africa working in brothels in the Netherlands. We also found girls from Thailand in South Africa. The traffickers don’t care. What they care about is money.”

The International Criminal Police Organisation (Interpol) estimates that traffickers earn as much as $19-billion annually.

According to the United Nations, up to 900 000 people are trafficked across international borders every year.

If the number of people who are trafficked within borders was taken into account, the figure would rise to between two and four-million.

Women from rural China, many of them poorly educated, were often brought to South Africa, said Martens.

The women were flown to Johannesburg, and then taken to Swaziland, Lesotho or Mozambique.

They then cross the border back into South Africa in a bid to circumvent airport immigration controls.

Eastern European women took a similar route into South Africa.

They were trafficked by members of the Russian mafia and crime syndicates from Bulgaria, which owned clubs in South Africa.

In contrast to the Chinese recruits, women from Eastern Europe tend to be highly educated. However, they were also poor and jobless, noted Martens.

Upon arrival, the women were informed that they must pay off a debt of between $12 000 and $15 000. Threats of physical violence, especially by Bulgarian traffickers, were frequently translated into action against those who disobeyed their captors.

According to the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies, as many as 500 organised crime groups operate in South Africa.

These included Nigerian gangs who operate mainly in Malawi, Zambia and South Africa.

Such gangs also traffic Mozambican women to South Africa, where they were sold as “wives” to people who worked on the mines near Johannesburg.

Effectively, the women become sex slaves for those who buy them, also providing unpaid domestic labour, said the IOM.

In addition, children find themselves caught up in the trade.

Only a fortunate few were given refuge in safe houses in South Africa.

“The children don’t trust anybody: they are traumatised [and] they hardly talk about their personal problems,” said Dumisani Mlambo of Amazing Grace, a children’s home in Malelane, a small South African town near the border with Swaziland and Mozambique.

“It is only after a year or two that they finally open up, adds Mlambo, who also works as a child trafficking officer.

Amazing Grace takes care of 50 children: 15 from Mozambique, three from Swaziland and the rest from South Africa.

“Some jump the border. Some are smuggled by human traffickers,” he said.

“The traffickers lure the children through their parents, with the promise of education and greener pastures in South Africa. Once they cross the border, which they do illegally of course, things change,” Mlambo noted.

Children who are not prostituted may also end up as cheap labour on farms, or in the construction industry. According to Mlambo, many of the children in this predicament also come from broken homes.

“Once they are picked up by the police, they are handed over to social workers who bring them to safe homes like ours,” he said.

“Unfortunately it’s not easy for us to trace their parents or guardians in Mozambique and Swaziland.”

Thabisile Msezane runs a home called Sithabile Child and Youth Centre, which caters for over 100 children in Benoni.

Nearly a quarter of the home’s residents are from neighbouring countries.

“The youngest we have is three months old. Her mother is a 16-year-old girl with a Zimbabwean accent. She was brought to us when she was seven months pregnant,” said Msezane.

Children’s rights groups like the Cape Town-based Molo Songolo estimate that 28 000 children engage in prostitution in South Africa — and that 25% of prostitutes in Cape Town are children.

About 5 000 young boys and girls are said to cater for foreign tourists in the city alone.

A short video clip shown to participants of the Benoni conference exposed the dangers of child prostitution in Cape Town.

In the video a 13-year-old girl says one of her clients is a 73-year-old man. Asked whether she is afraid of contracting HIV, a second 14-year-old girl simply shrugs her shoulders and says: “It’s better to die, because there is nothing to live for.”

Some of the participants did not realise the magnitude of trafficking in Southern Africa until they attended the conference.

“From what I’ve heard here and watched in the video, I’m shocked,” said Zodidi Tshotshu of Family and Victim Empowerment, a non-governmental organisation.

“We need a global approach. We can’t do it alone. We need the support of every country in order to fight the traffickers.”

Thoko Majokweni, head of the Sexual Offence Unit at South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority, told the conference that government was working on laws that would combat human trafficking.

“Right now our laws are fragmented. We hope the Sexual Offences Amendment Bill, which criminalises trafficking for sexual purposes, would help in the fight against trafficking,” she said. – IPS