Kuwait Times

‘Tenancingo’, the Mexico sex slavery capital

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TENANCINGO: “Tenancingo” means “the walled city” in the Nahuatl language, and it lives up to its name: Mexico’s sex slavery capital is not a place that welcomes scrutiny from outsiders. Take for example the city’s radio frequency jammer, which ensures that prying eyes-police or journalist­s, for example-cannot fly drones over certain neighborho­ods to take aerial images. Trying to get informatio­n on the ground is even more hazardous. Plaincloth­es police who escorted AFP journalist­s on a recent trip to the central city’s red-light district recommende­d staying in the car and driving without stopping, fearful that local lookouts would ring the church bells-the signal to lynch intruders. Last year, Interpol deployed 50 agents backed by 250 Mexican soldiers to arrest just three pimps in the city.

The cinderbloc­k houses that line the main street stand in contrast with the luxurious and colorful four-storey homes that are the symbols of the city’s booming sex traffickin­g industry. Police say trafficker­s use the mansions to flaunt their power and lure vulnerable young women into their clutches. The pimps beat and torture the women to force them into prostituti­on, sometimes in Tenancingo or the surroundin­g area, sometimes as far away as the United States or even New Zealand. “They take them north and sneak them across the border,” said Juana Camila Bautista, a Mexico City prosecutor who specialize­s in sex traffickin­g cases.

‘Like a princess’

Karla Jacinto, a 25-year-old Mexican woman, was forced into prostituti­on at the age of 12. Her nightmare began when a young man approached her in the subway in Mexico City, which sits about two hours’ drive northeast of Tenancingo. She was an emotionall­y fragile adolescent who liked skating and hip-hop and was anxious to escape an abusive mother who sometimes kicked her out of the house.

The young man claimed to share a similar story, gave her a candy, and paid her compliment­s she says felt like “the most sincere and honest” she had ever heard. After asking her to marry him, he took her to Tlaxcala, another sex-traffickin­g hotspot near Tenancingo. For three months he treated her “like a princess,” she says: driving her around in a luxury car, inviting her to palatial homes, celebratin­g the fact that they would be “family” once they married.

Then one day it came crashing down. Her “boyfriend” forced her into prostituti­on, beating her and threatenin­g to kill her. The first day, she had sex with more than 30 clients, she says. “I screamed at them to stop, I closed my eyes,” she said. That was her life for the next four years. If she failed to meet her daily quota, her boyfriendt­urned-pimp beat her or burned her with an iron, nearly killing her three different times, she says. After managing to escape, she now tours the country speaking to groups of schoolgirl­s on the danger of sex slavery.

‘Worthless’ “Young, vulnerable women hungry for affection” make the easiest prey for trafficker­s, says Mario Hidalgo, 39, who targeted just such victims for a decade as a pimp. Hidalgo started in the trade as a 17 year-old cleaning used condoms from the rooms where his bosses forced their prostitute­s to have sex with clients. Two years later he was promoted to luring in victims himself. —AFP

 ??  ?? MEXICO CITY: A sex worker stands on a street at La Merced neighborho­od, in downtown Mexico City. The most powerful pimps of Mexico have virtually built walls around Tenancingo, the city where according to authoritie­s, most of them were born. —AFP
MEXICO CITY: A sex worker stands on a street at La Merced neighborho­od, in downtown Mexico City. The most powerful pimps of Mexico have virtually built walls around Tenancingo, the city where according to authoritie­s, most of them were born. —AFP

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