Otago Daily Times

Selling sex to survive

Venezuelan­s are selling sex and hair to survive in a Colombian border city, reports Anastasia Moloney, of the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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AS Venezuela sinks further and further into economic turmoil, hundreds of thousands have fled the country, many of them crossing into neighbouri­ng Colombia. Their flight is the largest migration of people in South America’s recent history, and for some, sex work is their final, desperate option.

HYMNS sung at evening Mass float from an open church door across a busy square in Colombia’s border city of Cucuta, as about 20 Venezuelan sex workers wait for clients.

Crouched on the steps of a statue and surrounded by grubby motels, fastfood restaurant­s and bars, Andrea and Carolina say they fled Venezuela to escape hunger.

They now sell their bodies to support themselves and their families.

‘‘If I don’t do this, I and my children don’t eat. It’s that simple,’’ said 26yearold Andrea, who arrived four months ago, leaving her three young children with their grandmothe­r.

‘‘The money I send back home is what they survive on.’’

Her homeland is in the throes of economic turmoil with severe shortages of food and medicine, which the Organisati­on of American States has described as a ‘‘humanitari­an crisis’’.

About 672,000 Venezuelan­s have crossed into neighbouri­ng Colombia alone, both legally and illegally, since 2015, according to Colombian authoritie­s.

The exodus from the oilrich country is the largest migration of people in South America’s recent history, and it shows little signs of abating. For some, sex work is their final, desperate option.

In Cucuta’s Mercedes Square, young Venezuelan women wearing tight jeans and skimpy tops — some barely looking 18 years old — sit on park benches as police officers patrol.

For Carolina (30), a good day’s work means getting three clients, which brings in about $30. A third of that is spent on a motel room to take clients to, as well as condoms, food and daily rent for a room shared with four other women.

‘‘What I earn in a day here lasts more than a month for my family in Venezuela,’’ said the mother of four.

The devaluatio­n and hyperinfla­tion of Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar, means it has become virtually worthless.

Carolina said the monthly minimum salary in Venezuela only covered the cost of 1kg of rice or a carton of eggs. The situation was so bad she finally paid a gang $9 to cross into Colombia using illegal footpaths.

Until recently, she never imagined she could end up selling sex in Colombia.

‘‘I wasn’t a prostitute in Venezuela. I had a proper job,’’ said Carolina, who once worked as a company receptioni­st.

Scraping by

Noone knows how many Venezuelan sex workers are now in Cucuta, a city of 800,000 people. On any given night, up to 20 can be seen in each of the three main central squares.

They share the squares and streets with other Venezuelan­s who peddle sweets, coffee and cigarettes for small change.

Some migrants beg with babies in their arms, while others sift through rubbish bags and rely on the kindness of local residents and churchrun soup kitchens for a hot meal.

Venezuelan women also sell their hair.

In Cucuta’s main leafy square, where dozens of Venezuelan hawkers work, a few men wear signs reading: ‘‘We buy hair’’.

Women receive $10 to $40 depending on the length and quality of their mane.

Scores more prostitute­s work on street corners around the city’s bus terminal and in the red light district, alongside Venezuelan­s sleeping on cardboard in the streets.

‘‘We get the feeling that in certain areas and cities, there is a lot of survival sex,’’ Jozef Merkx, head of the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) in Colombia, said.

‘‘It’s not only with women, but with men, boys and children,’’ he said.

In response to the rising number of Venezuelan sex workers, Colombia’s constituti­onal court ruled last year they should be given work visas and have their rights protected.

Cucuta’s mayor, Cesar Rojas, said he had restricted bar opening hours in parts of the city to address the growing number of sex workers, but added that adult prostituti­on in designated red light districts was legal.

Venezuelan­s tended to charge less than their Colombian counterpar­ts, who were more likely to be found working in bars than on pavements, while teenagers could earn more than adults, Carolina said.

Sexual exploitati­on?

Andrea and Carolina say they are voluntaril­y working on their own, without a pimp. But local gangs charge them each about $2 a week to stand in the square.

‘‘Depending on the areas and cities, there might be mafias behind the sexual exploitati­on,’’ Merkx said.

‘‘We are seeing more people coming into Colombia without a passport and who have no migratory status, which makes them vulnerable to labour and sexual exploitati­on,’’ he said.

‘‘They do whatever they can to get money.’’

Other migrants try to find work as cleaners and street vendors, rather than turning to the sex trade.

‘‘I’d rather go without eating than stand on the street doing that,’’ Sofia Salas said, while standing in line at a soup kitchen with her sons and hundreds of other Venezuelan­s.

‘‘It’s very sad to see, especially the younger ones, the 13 and 14yearolds.’’

About 40,000 Venezuelan­s were crossing the border each month by late 2017, according to Colombian authoritie­s.

Many walk over a crowded bridge that connects Cucuta with Venezuela, lugging suitcases and plastic bags, and pushing elderly relatives in rented wheelchair­s under a blazing sun.

Those who settle in Cucuta are often Venezuela’s poorest.

With no passport or money to pay for bus tickets, they cannot move on to other cities in Colombia, or follow hundreds of thousands of others to Brazil, Peru, Chile and Ecuador.

Back at Mercedes Square, it has been a slow night.

‘‘We’ll be sending less money home this week,’’ Andrea said.

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Fleeing hardship . . . Venezuelan­s line up to cross into Colombia at the border in Paraguacho­n, Colombia.
PHOTO: REUTERS Fleeing hardship . . . Venezuelan­s line up to cross into Colombia at the border in Paraguacho­n, Colombia.

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