Kuwait Times

Forced smiles mask pain of HK trafficked bar girls

Girls forced to sell sex for Mama-san in Hong Kong

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As she smiles at customers and makes small talk with regulars in a Hong Kong bar, Kat’s every move is being watched by an older woman, a pimp who answers to the name “Mamasan”. The 23-year-old from the Philippine­s has been forced to sell sex for Mama-san and her organized crime network since December when she was moved to Hong Kong under a recruiter’s promise of a well-paying job and easy working conditions.

A single mother, whose own mother is too sick to work, Kat jumped at the chance to earn a high salary but soon after arriving in Hong Kong, Mamasan confiscate­d her passport and sent her to work in the bar alongside other trafficked women. Clients pay up to 5,000 Hong Kong dollars ($650) to have sex with Kat but payment goes directly to her pimp. Without any money, she said she cannot escape or fly home - and besides, her trafficker­s know where her family lives. “I’m depressed. The other bar girls are depressed. They have to force themselves to be happy and make jokes,” said Kat, sobbing. “The Chinese bar owner gets angry with me because I look so sad.”

Kat, who declined to give her real name, is one of hundreds of women who are trafficked to Hong Kong from mainland China, Southeast Asia, Europe and South America for forced prostituti­on in the city’s brothels, bars, spas and pornograph­y industry, rights activists say. Many victims do not speak out for fear of being punished by their trafficker­s, some of them linked to the powerful Triad organized crime group. Others are afraid of being deported home or criminaliz­ed for being in the possession of fake papers arranged by their pimps, campaigner­s say.

“I take a risk every time I go out with a male customer,” said Kat, who also shudders at the parties she is made to attend where cocaine, marijuana and other drugs are used by clients and forced on the girls. “They are great actresses because like one of them said, ‘I need to show that I am happy and OK even when I am not’. This to me kills a soul,” said Marcela Santos, an advocate for traffickin­g victims who did not want to give her real name, saying it may put at risk her work helping survivors with jobs, training and sometimes a flight home.

Last year, the US State Department downgraded Hong Kong in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons report to its Tier 2 Watch List, just one rank above countries like North Korea. The report criticized Hong Kong for not doing more to identify victims of sex and labor traffickin­g among vulnerable groups such as foreign migrants, domestic workers and women and children in prostituti­on.

In 2016, the police identified a total of 16 traffickin­g victims who were foreign women forced into prostituti­on. Hong Kong’s Security Bureau, in charge of law and order as well as immigratio­n, said the police officers had been provided with regular training on identifyin­g victims of human traffickin­g. Recognizin­g the need for more training, the Immigratio­n Department and Hong Kong Police Force introduced new and revised procedures for identifyin­g potential traffickin­g victims including a checklist for danger signs.

The list of vulnerable traffickin­g victims has also been expanded to sex workers, illegal workers and illegal immigrants. “It’s often challengin­g for law enforcemen­t personnel and service providers to identify potential victims. In most situations, victims cannot escape from the trafficker­s,” said Nurul Qoiriah, head of the Sub-Office of the UN Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) in Hong Kong. Sandy Wong, chair of the Anti-Human Traffickin­g Committee of the Hong Kong Federation of Women Lawyers, said the best way to tackle forced prostituti­on was to target buyers of sex. “Despite the police’s commitment and constant efforts in combating vice establishm­ents, many operate in broad daylight and through the cracks in the legal system and evade arrest by police,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Investigat­ing forced prostituti­on takes a long time with many victims unwilling to come forward as witnesses, she said. “If we don’t stop the source of demand, there will always be someone who will provide the supply by hook or by crook,” Wong said, adding that Hong Kong should consider adopting a version of Sweden’s 1999 law which criminaliz­es the purchase of sex.

Drugs

Some victims blame police corruption for inaction over human traffickin­g in Hong Kong. One of the Philippine women Santos helped to rescue, Jean, said she was brought to Hong Kong on a two-month tourist visa in 2014 by an organized crime group in the Philippine­s with Triad links. Her trafficker­s then used fraud to organize a two-year domestic helper visa for her as part of an arrangemen­t with a bar in Hong Kong co-owned by a police officer - where she was immediatel­y put to work.

“Of course it’s like torture to pay back the debt. The agent doesn’t care. They don’t know how clients treat you badly,” she said by telephone from Manila where she now lives. “Life was hell. The most traumatic thing is you have to do a lot of drugs. Clients ask you to buy drugs like cocaine, ice, marijuana ... (They) make you take it with them.” She said the pimps always knew when the police planned to come to the bar to check the women’s papers because their passports would be returned to them temporaril­y.

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