Eastern Eye (UK)

Special drive held to inoculate sex workers

WOMEN FROM BANGLADESH BROTHELS HOPE TO REGAIN LOST LIVELIHOOD

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HUNDREDS of sex workers at Bangladesh’s largest brothel were vaccinated in a one-day inoculatio­n drive that the participan­ts hoped will revive an industry devastated by the pandemic.

Bangladesh, one of the few Muslim nations where prostituti­on is legal, has at least 11 brothels operationa­l across the country of 169 million.

The western town of Daulatdia, a vast warren of shacks, has been running a brothel for more than a century, but the livelihood­s of many sex workers have been hit hard by coronaviru­s lockdowns and fears over contractin­g the virus.

Authoritie­s have been trying to vaccinate the workers living there but have been hampered by a shortage of supplies. Health officials administer­ed first and second doses of India-made AstraZenec­a vaccines to nearly 200 sex workers in Daulatdia starting from February.

But they were unable to expand the programme further after New Delhi froze exports.

Officials said the scheme restarted last Wednesday (18) after Bangladesh received millions of doses from China and from the United States under the Covax initiative. “We now have sufficient supply,” Daulatdia’s chief doctor Asif Mahmud said.

It was “very satisfying” to witness a strong turnout for the jabs in the town, he added.

About 400 Chinese Sinopharm jabs were administer­ed last Wednesday as first doses, covering most of the remaining eligible population of sex workers, health officials said.

The jabs are only available to workers aged above 25 but many in the brothel are underage girls. Ruksana, a 26-year-old lining up to receive her first shot, said business had been badly hit by coronaviru­s lockdowns and fears among clients that they could contract the virus.

“There were days when we had to starve. People died from the corona around the world. But we nearly died of hunger,” Ruksana, who goes by only one name, said. “We are hopeful (that) as we all are gradually getting vaccines, we will start getting back work.”

Bangladesh has reported more than 1.4 million infections and nearly 25,000 deaths, but experts say the actual figures are likely much higher.

Authoritie­s earlier this month vaccinated about three million people across the country in a special week-long campaign during a major surge in cases that sparked a nationwide lockdown.

 ??  ?? HARD-HIT: An official registers the details of sex workers during a vaccinatio­n drive held in Daulatdia last Wednesday (18)
HARD-HIT: An official registers the details of sex workers during a vaccinatio­n drive held in Daulatdia last Wednesday (18)

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