Bangkok Post

‘I HAD NOTHING LEFT’

Loan sharks target Indian sex workers hit by pandemic. Roli Srivastava in Mumbai

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When Indian sex worker Baji fell behind on her repayments to a loan shark during lockdown, her house was ransacked and her only belongings of any value — the kitchen utensils — were stolen. It was another low point in a terrible year.

As Covid-19 hit their incomes, hundreds of cash-strapped sex workers in southern Andhra Pradesh state turned to unofficial moneylende­rs to get through the pandemic — most of them lacking the papers needed to get formal bank credit, campaigner­s say.

“I had nothing left in my kitchen the day the lender approached me with a loan offer. He had a polite and assuring manner and said there was no urgency to repay the money,” Baji, 26, who goes by one name, said by phone from Krishna district.

“But he returned week after week. I repaid 1,200 rupees (about US$16.50) from the loan itself, but when I stopped they ransacked my home and took all my utensils,” the mother of two told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “It was traumatic.”

Before the coronaviru­s swept into India, Baji earned up to 1,000 rupees a day, enough to feed her children and keep a roof over their heads, but last year’s lockdown pushed her and other sex workers in India and beyond to the brink.

There are about 800,000 sex workers across India, according to government data but campaigner­s estimate their numbers to be much higher. More than 100,000 are registered in Andhra Pradesh alone, data with campaigner­s show.

Reflecting concern about the plight of India’s informal workers, a national human rights panel asked state government­s in October to formally recognise sex workers, a step that would have granted them benefits from a $23-billion state aid fund.

But the order was reversed after activists said such a move would be illegal and risked legitimisi­ng sex traffickin­g.

While sex workers did receive some food aid, their lack of earnings made many vulnerable to abuse by loan sharks, especially in Andhra Pradesh where authoritie­s have been trying to rein in widespread informal moneylende­rs for years.

A collective representi­ng 6,000 sex workers in the state said more than three-quarters of its members were in debt. Many live in fear and face daily threats and abuse from the loan sharks.

“The lenders stand on the streets and yell at them, body-shame them. They have started fleeing their homes,” said Potluri Devi, who heads the Andhra Pradesh chapter of the National Network of Sex Workers.

“They’re drawn to these lenders as they aren’t required to give any collateral or proof of identity. They start with small amounts that the women are able to repay. The women feel confident (and) borrow more,” Devi said.

“That’s how they get trapped.” Authoritie­s in Andhra Pradesh, once known as the centre of India’s microfinan­ce sector, have sought to regulate private money lending — widely known as the “call money” racket due to the ease with which money can be borrowed over the phone.

About a decade ago, the state government curbed microfinan­ce activities after a spate of suicides by borrowers, and in 2015 it banned moneylende­rs from operating without a licence after arresting about 200 people due to harassment complaints.

But industry analysts said unscrupulo­us financiers — who charge high interest rates and resort to heavy-handed means to collect debts — are partly the result of inadequate legitimate credit sources in the state.

“These are unsecured loans. There is nobody else to borrow money from,” said Harsh Shrivastav­a, former head of Microfinan­ce Institutio­ns Network, a self-regulatory organisati­on for the microfinan­ce sector.

Women borrow from one [loan shark] to pay another. They are trapped in this debt cycle

RAM MOHAN Anti-traffickin­g activist

Shrivastav­a said the situation was particular­ly acute in Andhra Pradesh because unregister­ed lenders had proliferat­ed due to the vacuum left when microfinan­ce firms offering small loans to low-income borrowers were restricted.

Officials at the state’s crime investigat­ion department (CID) said complaints against moneylende­rs were common, though no specific complaints from sex workers had been received.

“Institutio­nal lending is difficult to approach and this is informal money lending and very flexible, despite outrageous interest rates,” said PV Sunil Kumar, a director-general at the CID.

Lenders routinely deduct 10% to 20% from the loan principal even before handing over the money, sex workers and police officials said.

But because they give loans without requiring collateral or documentat­ion, they are like “god”, said Ram Mohan, co-founder of the anti-traffickin­g charity HELP.

“Women borrow from one to pay another. They are trapped in this debt cycle,” Ram Mohan said.

Many of those who fall behind on their debts are too scared to go to the police if the moneylende­rs become abusive or violent, campaigner­s said.

Baji took up sex work at the age of 17 when she was a single parent, recently deserted by her abusive husband, but she had some optimism about the future until her debts spiralled at the height of the Covid lockdown.

After the burglary, she was forced to take up work at a brick kiln, earning 400 rupees for a 12-hour day.

That too was halved after a mound of bricks fell on her leg, requiring surgery costing 20,000 rupees. Her employer lent her the money but deducts repayments from her wages.

“We had problems in sex work, but I was earning and was able to survive and there was hope. I have nothing to look forward to now,” she said.

 ??  ?? A woman holds 500- and 1,000-rupee banknotes as she stands in a queue at a bank in Kanpur, India.
A woman holds 500- and 1,000-rupee banknotes as she stands in a queue at a bank in Kanpur, India.
 ??  ?? Sex workers stand on a roadside pavement in a red-light area of Mumbai.
Sex workers stand on a roadside pavement in a red-light area of Mumbai.

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