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Horrors of India's brothels documented: BBC

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BBC News - Horrors of India's brothels documented

Horrors of India's brothels documented
22 November 2013 Last updated at 20:43 ET
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Guddi, 22, says she is 'trapped' in Mumbai's red light district
British photojournalist Hazel Thompson has spent the last decade documenting the lives of girls trafficked into India's thriving sex industry. She spoke to Atish Patel about her experiences.

Guddi was only 11 years old when her family was persuaded by a neighbour to send her to the city of Mumbai hundreds of miles away from her poverty-stricken village in the eastern state of West Bengal.

They promised her a well-paid job as a housemaid to help feed her family.

Instead, she ended up at one of Asia's largest red light districts to become a sex worker.

Trafficked by her neighbour, she arrived at a brothel. She was raped by a customer and spent the next three months in hospital.

'Harrowing'
Guddi's sad and harrowing story is similar to many of the estimated 20,000 sex workers in Kamathipura, established over 150 years ago during colonial rule as one of Mumbai's "comfort zones" for British soldiers.

"They raped her to break her," said Ms Thompson.

Ms Thompson's journey into Kamathipura started in 2002 when she travelled there to photograph children born into the sex trade. The result is her new, interactive ebook, Taken.

Mumbai's oldest and largest red light district is a maze of around 14 dingy, cramped lanes overlooked by gleaming, new skyscrapers - symbols of India's recent economic prosperity that has lifted millions out of poverty.

But in Kamathipura, time seems to have stood still.

Throughout the 1800s, the British military established and maintained brothels for its troops to use across India.

The girls, many in their early teens from poor, rural Indian families, were recruited and paid directly by the military, which also set their prices.

By 1864, there were eight neighbourhoods in Mumbai which were home to more than 500 prostitutes. Almost 60 years later, there were only two, with Kamathipura being the largest.

"The system is continuing to be fed to this day," Ms Thompson said.

To protect the women from violent customers, police introduced bars to the windows and doors of brothels in the 1890s.

These "cages" still exist today and some women continue to work and live in the same brothels constructed by the British.

"Nothing has changed for 120 years. Nothing," Ms Thompson claimed.

Today the women charge up to 500 rupees ($8; £5) for sex and girls aged between 12 and 16 can earn up to 2,000 rupees($32; £20), she added.

Virgins in Kamathipura are auctioned to the highest bidder.

'Modern day slavery'
The 35-year-old photographer was able to gain access to this secret world after reaching out to Bombay Teen Challenge, a charity consisting of former sex workers and pimps who for more than 20 years have been rescuing and rehabilitating women working in Kamathipura.

Entering the brothels initially under the guise of an aid worker, she shot images discreetly from the back of vehicles, the roofs of buildings and under her scarf.

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Ms Thompson's ebook uses texts, images and videos on life in brothels
"The way I worked was I would go in and come out. I would spend a few days and attention would build up so I would leave," she said.

She felt constantly on edge every time she went into the district, reaching a tipping point in 2010 when she was manhandled by a gangster while she interacted with a prostitute.

"Along the journey there were many times I wanted to give up," she added.

Ms Thompson's ebook, which uses texts, images and videos to get a sense of what life is like in Kamathipura, also includes stories from women who managed to escape from a situation she describes as "modern-day slavery".

Lata, for example, was tricked and trafficked by her boyfriend at the age of 16, when she was drugged and taken to Mumbai from the southern state of Karnataka.

But years later, with the help of Bombay Teen Challenge, she was reunited with her family and now lives in a rehabilitation home run by the charity.

"In the 11 years I've been there, I've never met one woman who has chosen to be there. Every woman I've met has been trafficked or born there," Ms Thompson said.

"These girls who have been trafficked can't return to their families because of the stigma and [yet it is] often [they who] are responsible for them being in Kamathipura," she added.

The British photojournalist is also launching a campaign with the UK-based Jubilee Charity calling for India and other countries to criminalise the purchase of sex.

In April, the Indian government amended the law to broaden the types of crimes considered to be a trafficking offence and established harsher sentences for traffickers.

But enforcement of anti-trafficking laws remains a problem, as does official complicity, according to the US State Department's Trafficking in Persons Report 2013.

"Countries like Sweden and Norway have made the purchase of sexual services illegal and it has had a profound impact on demand, causing trafficking to also decrease significantly," Ms Thompson said.

"This change is desperately needed for Mumbai and all of India."
 
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While I do not support brothels and all that, BUT, seeing a British woman making this film makes me think only one thing.

Britain is as dead as the pig that provided the pork that I ate today. Not only are you not a world power anymore, you are not even the greatest in Europe.

Maybe this woman should do a documentation on the delusions of the British, and sell that to the public. I'm sure it's just as touching.
 
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While I do not support brothels and all that, BUT, seeing a British woman making this film makes me think only one thing.

Britain is as dead as the pig that provided the pork that I ate today. Not only are you not a world power anymore, you are not even the greatest in Europe.

Maybe this woman should do a documentation on the delusions of the British, and sell that to the public. I'm sure it's just as touching.

Well said. Couldn't agree more on this.

Those Brit A #0les are the "root cause" for the 99% problems on whole globe. Wherever these bloody Brits and other European b@st@rds stepped in, they have ensured chaos even after they left permanently from occupied lands.
 
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While I do not support brothels and all that, BUT, seeing a British woman making this film makes me think only one thing.

Britain is as dead as the pig that provided the pork that I ate today. Not only are you not a world power anymore, you are not even the greatest in Europe.

Maybe this woman should do a documentation on the delusions of the British, and sell that to the public. I'm sure it's just as touching.


You are right.For britians this documentary is an elixir to their eyes,a pathetic state of their
former colony.But as an Indian ,this is just their propaganda.Now the great empire UK ,is just shadow and also live in the shadow of USA.After all they looted India ,Pakistan ,China.
It is sure these social evils must be destroyed.But UK is not better.rape victims dont get enough justice in UK.
 
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prostitution is blot on humanity, this evil should be rooted out. if it happens that i become the PM of India one thing i can promise that all those who subject women to such brutality will be tortured to death. they will die slow and very painful death
 
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7 Reasons Why America Should Legalize Prostitution
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Business Insider's Dylan Love had his expectations shattered when he reported on a Nevada brothel and observed that legalized, well-regulated prostitution can be both safe and profitable.


Nevada only allows prostitution in licensed brothels that test workers routinely for sexually transmitted infections. While Love is not the first to observe legal prostitution can be relatively safe, Nevada's rural counties are the only place in America where the world's oldest profession is officially allowed.

Here are seven solid arguments for why the rest of the United States should let people sell sex in a well-regulated capacity, as they do in the Netherlands,Switzerland, and parts of Mexico, among other countries.

It Would Reduce Violence Against Women
Prostitutes in America (mostly women) are vulnerable to violence from customers and pimps.

A study of San Francisco prostitutes found that 82% had been assaulted and 68% had been raped while working as prostitutes. Another study of prostitutes in Colorado Springs found they were 18 times more likely to be murdered than non-prostitutes their age and race.

Prostitutes who experience violence may be reluctant to call the cops since what they're doing is illegal. Sex workers in licensed brothels, on the other hand, can have somebody to back them up, according to a paper by Barbara Brents and Kathryn Hausbeck of the University of Nevada. Brents and Hausbeck interviewed brothel owners and made these observations:

Brothel owners have a clear interest in maintaining their image as law-abiding, trouble-free businesses to keep their licenses and maintain good relations within their communities. The owners we interviewed ensure this by making it policy to call the police at the slightest hint of trouble to send a message that they don’t tolerate bad behavior. "The whole name of the game is control. But that control also makes us get along pretty well with the sheriff’s office," one owner told the researchers. "There are two reasons for doing it, one, the sheriff’s office, but also the girls’ personal safety."

The study concluded that "brothels offer the safest environment available for women to sell consensual sex acts for money."

Legalization Would Make Sex Workers Healthier
Illegal street prostitutes might face pressure from pimps and Johns to forgo condoms. But states that legalize prostitution can require sex workers to use condoms and get tested for sexually transmitted diseases.

Sex workers in Nevada have to get monthly tests for syphilis and HIV and weekly tests for gonorrhea and chlamydia. Nevada also requires condoms for all sex in brothels. This law is posted on the outside of the state's brothels, according to the paper by Barbara Brents and Kathryn Hausbeck of the University of Nevada.

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Reuters/Adam Tanner

Susan Austin, the madam at the Wild Horse Adult Resort & Spa outside Reno, poses outside the World Famous Brothel in Nevada.





"All of the women we interviewed were passionate about expressing their support for these law. For example, they insisted that they always use condoms, whether the client prefers to or not," the report stated.

Making sex work a crime can drive prostitutes underground and make them less likely to practice safe sex and get tested for sexually transmitted disease.

An April 2012 study by the Urban Justice Center found that New York City cops were actually using condoms found on women as evidence in criminal prostitution cases against them. It's easy to imagine how this practice might deter sex workers from carrying protection.

The United Nations Development Programme published a report last year on illegal sex work in Asia and the Pacific that highlighted just how damaging the criminalization of sex work can be to women's health. Here's what it said:

Criminalization increases vulnerability to HIV by fueling stigma and discrimination, limiting access to HIV and sexual health services, condoms and harm reduction services, and adversely affecting the self-esteem of sex workers and their ability to make informed choices about their health.

Prostitution Is Arguably A Victimless Crime
While some advocates argue that prostitutes are victims of Johns and pimps, sex work can be a victimless crime if women sell their bodies of their own volition. (Moreover, it doesn't make sense to arrest sex workers if they are their own "victims.")

As Cornell law professor Sherry Colb has written, "Prostitution should not be a crime. Prostitutes are not committing an inherently harmful act. While the spread of disease and other detriments are possible in the practice of prostitution, criminalization is a sure way of exacerbating rather than addressing such effects."

Legal Prostitution Can Be A Source Of Tax Revenue
While brothels in Nevada pay no state taxes, they pay "significant amounts of tax" to the rural counties where they do business, according to The New York Times. (Nevada Republicansblocked a plan a couple of years ago to subject brothels to state taxes, as they didn't want schools and other state services funded by sex work.)

Illegal prostitution businesses in America, of course, pay no taxes. If those brothels were legalized, then state and county governments could gain significant revenue.

"Let government share in the revenue, but otherwise stay out of the affairs of consenting adults," MSNBC political analyst Michael Smerconish has written.

Legalization Could Save Precious Law Enforcement Resources
The investigation into notorious John, and former New York governor, Eliot Spitzer is a perfect example of how costly it can be to probe sophisticated prostitution rings.

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Reuters/Carlo Allegri

Ashley Alexandra Dupre, pictured here, was a high-priced prostitute who had Eliot Spitzer for a client.





"In this case, they wiretapped 5,000 phone conversations, intercepted 6,000 emails, used surveillance and undercover tactics that are more appropriate for trapping terrorists than entrapping Johns," famed Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

Dershowitz has also told MSNBC's Michael Smerconish, "Every hour spent going after prostitution is an hour that could have been spent going after terrorists and going after people who victimize."

Legal Prostitutes Could Get Labor Rights
Legally employed people in America get rights like a minimum wage, freedom from discrimination, and a safe work environment. Since prostitutes don't work legally, they don't get any of those rights.

The United Nations Development Programme's report on sex work in Asia and the Pacific highlighted why it's problematic when sex workers don't have legal rights.

Sex workers in all countries of the region except New Zealand and the state of New South Wales (Australia) lack the labour rights afforded to other workers, including the legal right to a safe and healthy workplace and to reasonable terms and conditions of employment ... Labour laws and social security laws that do not recognize sex work as legitimate work contribute to stigma and marginalization of sex workers.

Prostitution Isn't Going Away Anytime Soon
There will always be lonely or kinky men in America who will pay for sex, and there will always be women willing to rent out their bodies. As the anthropologist Patty Kelly has written in the Los Angeles Times, prostitution has become a "part of our culture" in the United States.

It's high time to legalize and regulate this part of American life, even if a lot of people have ethical problems with it.

We legalize and regulate a ton of commerce that's morally controversial — like gambling, alcohol, tobacco, lap-dancing, and pornography. Yes, women can be coerced into prostituting themselves. But we're not helping them by making consenting sex work a crime.

Why America Should Legalize Prostitution - Business Insider

The 6 Types Of Prostitutes And Where They Work

Business Insider's Dylan Love recently had his expectations shattered when he reported on a Nevada brothel, but he was actually only getting a glimpse into one type of prostitution.


The sociologist Ronald Weitzeridentifies the six most common types of prostitutes and where they work in a fascinating book called "Legalizing Prostitution."

Weitzer's book looks at legalizedprostitution in other countriesand illegal prostitution in America, finding that some sex work is better for women than others. Here are the six types of prostitution, which Weitzer adapted from the book "Immoral Landscape: Female Prostitution in Western Societies" by Richard Symanski.

Independent Call Girl/Escort

Independent escorts work for themselves in hotels and private buildings like houses, charge high prices, and stay away from the public eye. They likely advertise their services online, and they get to keep their profits since they're self-employed.

Escort Agency Employee

Like independent call girls, employees of escort agencies work in private locations or hotels and charge relatively high prices. (Ex-New York Governor Eliot Spitzer slept with an escort agency employee, Ashley Dupré, for $4,300 a night.) Weitzer says these employees face "moderate exploitation" since they have to give a cut of their earnings to their agencies.

Brothel Employee

Brothels are dedicated locations where people pay for sex and can include saunas and massage parlors, Weitzer writes. The prices they charge are "moderate," and brothel workers endure "moderate exploitation" since they have to give part of their earnings to the brothel owners, he said. Licensed brothels are legal in parts of Nevada.

Window Worker

Thistype of prostitution is prevalent in Amsterdam, enticing passersby to enter houses of prostitution by prominently displaying the women in windows. Here's Weitzer's excellent description of window work, which pays women a low-to-moderate wage.

Almost all of Amsterdam's window rooms are single occupancy, separating workers from each other. Some rooms are connected to a bathroom and kitchen shared by several workers, but the women spend most of their time by themselves in front of the windows. The situation contrasts sharply with brothels, where workers can enjoy a party atmosphere and regular social contact with other providers, staff, and customers.

Bar or Casino Worker

These sex workers make initial contact with men at a bar or casino and then have sex at a separate location. In bars in Thailand, the Philippines, and the Dominican Republic, guys pay "bar fees" to leave a club with a worker and spend several days with her, Weitzer writes. The guys (often foreigners) pay the women's expenses during that time, in an arrangement that often confers status on the prostitute. The women earn low-to-moderate salaries.

Streetwalker

Streetwalkers earn relatively little money and are vulnerable to exploitation, Weitzer writes. Not surprisingly, they report less job satisfaction and get paid less than "indoor prostitutes" (bar workers, brothel workers, or call girls).

Streetwalking is also notoriously dangerous. One study found prostitutes in Colorado Springs were 18 times more likely to be murdered than other women of a similar age. Some experts say making prostitution legal everywhere — as it is in the Netherlands, parts of Mexico, and parts of Nevada — is the only way to make it safer and less stigmatized.
 
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Prostitution in India should be regulated and legalised.
 
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Prostitution in India should be regulated and legalised.

Prostitution isn't the issue. An adult who decides to voluntarily sell his or her body for money has only their conscience and inner morality to deal with and so does the person who purchases those services. Hence I cannot argue with you on that point. What about human trafficking ? Children and generally people who are duped into becoming prostitutes or sex slaves ? That is the issue which governments of the world must deal with
 
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Let us now examine the horrors of British brothels.
 
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How come most of these stupid servey and thesis are conducted by Brits ?
Brothals all across the globe are facing same issues.
 
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in a bid to save ourselves of the moral delusions we are deviating from the topic. britain may be bad, but as we are discussing about the pitiable conditions in the indian brothels , particularly mumbai.
not only the villages from west bengal, girls at a very tender age, and their families are duped to fill up the seats in brothels. nepalese, bengali, assamese, adivasis, bangladeshis, u name it ...u got it.
prostitution may be bad for those who are morally on high ground, but for those whose only livelihood comes from this profession, try to teach them a lesson in morality or two.
there are two problems here:
1. unscrupulous dalals (pimps)
2. ignorance and poverty of the families from where the girls are sourced.

u cant deal with the pimps....they are unscrupulous to the core. no amount of coaxing or incentives can cure them of their disease.
poverty is a long term engagement, but ignorance of the parents, can be easily and swiftly finished by one or more massive info campaigns in those affected areas.
@Genesis is right in his point but the successive replies to his post are the perfect examples of escapism.
 
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in a bid to save ourselves of the moral delusions we are deviating from the topic. britain may be bad, but as we are discussing about the pitiable
@Genesis is right in his point but the successive replies to his post are the perfect examples of escapism.

Moral Delusions ?.....Have you gone insane ?...Its the Brits and Americans who are having moral delusions..India is doing a fine job exposing this problem in our society.... Their own houses are dirty and they have the Audacity to point fingers at others and people like you have the time to repeat the same Rhetoric ..
 
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British acting surprised that some people in the developing world are suffering.

How much did they loot from the rest of the world in their colonization period? It's easy for them to be comfortable when they know they are never going to pay it back.
 
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