Kuwait Times

Sex workers in Peru sharing food to survive

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LIMA: Prevented by the lockdown over the coronaviru­s pandemic from earning a living, Peru’s sex workers have had to organize soup kitchens supplied by food handouts to feed themselves and their children.

“We have 70 meals we’re going to make on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, because most of the girls work on the streets and there’s no work,” 61-year-old Lidia Portales, who helps run a foundation that represents sex workers in Lima, told AFP.

If their children have nothing to eat “the mother despairs, and I have three girls who’ve given birth during the quarantine,” added Portales, of the Miluska Life and Dignity network. In a large house in the historic center of Lima, a group of prostitute­s prepare huge pots of cooked food for their colleagues and families.

People in their profession have faced a worrying and uncertain period since Peru enforced a lockdown on March 16. Wearing red face masks, and some in high heels, the women arrive carrying their children in their arms.

“Miluska Life and Dignity is my organizati­on, our organizati­on and everyone’s organizati­on,” Leida Portal told AFP. The 53-year-old is president of the network fighting the criminaliz­ation of and violence against prostitute­s, and their right to access health care.

“We have extreme cases of women who were working in brothels that are now closed. What can they do? How can they support their families?” said Portal.

“There are colleagues that have their little rooms and live there with their children. They sell themselves to get food for their children and themselves.

“Then there are other colleagues in other places who come to work the streets who will also come here for their food.” Peru, a country of 33 million, has recorded the second-most coronaviru­s cases in Latin America with more than 187,000 and over 5,000 deaths, the third most in the region.

As well as running the soup kitchens, the group has been distributi­ng food in various districts of the capital thanks to donations and from the sale of masks and syrups they made themselves. The group, founded in 2004, helps around 1,000 sex workers.

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