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Tuesday 20 March 2012

Teenage hold dark secret



The neighborhood of around a hundred of buildings with more than 800 small rooms is one of the 14 official brothels of Bangladesh, but are in essence a prison for around 900 sex workers. The young sex workers of this brothel must serve at least 10-15 customers each day. It is common practice among prostitutes of Kandapara brothel in Tangail to take steroids like Oradexon — a steroid used by farmers to fatten their cattle. The drug can be found in any tea or cigarette stall around the brothel. It increases their appetite, making them gain weight rapidly and giving the appearance that these poorly nourished teens are in fact healthy and older - attracting clients who prefer girls with "curves".Oradexon, they say, keeps them going, even though there are known risks associated with its long-term use. Here is a photo essay by Andrew Biraj that takes a look at the dark secret behind Bangladesh's "teenage" brothels.

There is no shortage of men looking for "company" in Kandapara slum, a labyrinth of tiny lanes - lined cheek-by-jowl with corrugated iron shacks - a few hours drive northeast of Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka.

  1. TANGAIL, Bangladesh (Reuters) - Their faces painted heavy with make-up, teenage girls in short, tight blouses and long petticoats loiter in squalid alleys, laughing and gesturing to potential clients who roam Tangail town's infamous red light area in the early evening.
  2. There is no shortage of men looking for "company" in Kandapara slum, a labyrinth of tiny lanes - lined cheek-by-jowl with corrugated iron shacks - a few hours drive northeast of Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka.
  3. But with rates as low as 50 taka (60 U.S. cents), the need to attract as many customers as possible is desperate - prompting a rising, yet dangerous, trend of steroid abuse among adolescent sex workers to "enhance" their appearance.
  4. "There is a huge difference between my appearance now and the malnourished look of my childhood," says Hashi, 17, who was lured into the sex trade by a trafficker when she was 10 and sold to Kandapara's brothel, where she began taking steroids.
  5. "I am healthier than before and fit to serve a lot of customers in a day. Sometimes up to 15," she says, placing a large black bindi, or dot used by Hindu women, between her perfectly shaped eyebrows.She sits in her tiny room with a bed, a cooking stove and posters of Bollywood stars taped across the wall.
  6. Hashi washes her hair at Kandapara brothel in Tangail, a northeastern city of Bangladesh. REUTERS/Andrew Biraj
  7. Hashi is one of around 900 sex workers - some as young as 12 - living a painful life of exploitation in Kandapara, not only bonded by debt and fear of stigma, but compelled to take the steroid, Oradexon, which brings more income but leaves dangerous side effects.Also known as Dexamethasone, Oradexon treats inflammation and allergies in humans and is used by farmers to fatten livestock.
  8. Hashi, embraces a Babu, her "husband", inside her small room at Kandapara brothel in Tangail, a northeastern city of Bangladesh, March 4, 2012. Many young and inexperienced prostitutes have "lovers" or "husbands" who normally live outside the brothel occasionally taking money and sex from them in exchange for security in this male dominated society.
  9. Charities say the over-the-counter drug is taken by 90 percent of sex workers in Kandapara and the other 14 legalized brothels across this impoverished South Asian nation.The girls are first forced to take it by their madams, or "sardarnis", who run the brothels.
  10. It increases their appetite, making them gain weight rapidly and giving the appearance that these poorly nourished teens are in fact healthy and older - attracting clients who prefer girls with "curves".It also helps sardarnis keep the police away. The legal age for sex work in Bangladesh is 18.The girls then continue to consume it, saying that it keeps them "strong and healthy", which in turn will help them get more clients in a day so they can ...more 
  11. "My sardarni forced me to take a tablet. She beat me up and stopped giving food. She threatened me and reminded me about my loans," says Hashi, who has a four-year-old son staying with relatives, whom she has not seen for two years."In this brothel, customers always look for healthy girls. I take Oradexon. I need customers so I can pay my bills and loans. If I don't get any customers one day, I cannot eat in the next day. I wish to save some ...more 
  12. Sold for as little as 20,000 taka ($245) by their poor, rural families to traffickers, they are then traded on to brothel sardarnis, who are former prostitutes themselves and keep the teenagers in bonded sex work.The girls speak of being with up to 15 men in one day, but say their earnings are pocketed by their sardarnis, who tell them they have to work to pay off the money paid for them. Many girls have been in Kandapara's brothel for years, yet...more 
  13. Oradexon, they say, keeps them going, even though there are known risks associated with its long-term use.The steroid can cause diabetes, high blood pressure, skin rashes and headaches and is highly addictive, according to social activists.It also weakens the immune system and leaves patients more susceptible to illnesses. There have been reports of young sex workers dying from over-use of the drug.The small white pill is easily available in ...more 
  14. "Steroids are life-saving as well as life-destroying drugs which are used by sex workers in poor countries," said Shipra Gowshami, a lawyer and human rights activist who works with sex workers in brothels in the central Bangladeshi town of Faridpur.
  15. In 2010, ActionAid Bangladesh began a campaign to promote awareness of the drug among sex workers. But they say they are facing a long fight in persuading not only the brothels to stop using it but also authorities to regulate it."There have been attempts to raise awareness on the negative impact of the use of such medicine but brothel owners, madams and pimps are a long way from withdrawing such practices," said Farah Kabir, country director for ActionAid Bangladesh."We have an uphill battle, yet it can be won. There needs to be greater regulation in the sale of such drugs. Government and the state must play an active role." 
    Text Courtesy : Reuters
    (Writing by Nita Bhalla; Editing by John Chalmers and Paul Tait)

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