The Borneo Post

Women trafficked to Kenya’s Bollywood-style dance bars

- Nita Bhalla

MOMBASA, Kenya: Nepali beautician Sheela didn’t think twice about ditching her salon job when she received a call offering seven times her salary to work as a cultural dancer at a nightclub in Kenya.

It didn’t matter that the 23year-old woman from a village in the Himalayan foothills had never heard of the east African nation.

Or that she had no experience as a dancer, had never met the owner of the club, and was not shown an employment contract.

With elderly parents to care for and medical bills to clear a er her brother suffered a motorbike accident, the offer of 60,000 Kenyan shillings (US$600) monthly, with food, housing and transport costs all covered, was a no-brainer for Sheela.

“(But) it was not what I expected,” said Sheela, who was rescued with 11 other Nepali women from a nightclub in Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa in April where she danced on stage from 9pm to 4am getting tips from male clients.

“I was told that being escorted everywhere by the driver, not leaving the flat except for work, and not having my passport or phone, was for my safety,” added Sheela, who did not want to give her real name, at a safe house in Mombasa’s Shanzu suburb.

A rising number of women and girls are leaving South Asian nations such as Nepal, India and Pakistan to work in Bollywoods­tyle dance bars in Kenya’s adult entertainm­ent industry – many illegally – according to antitraffi­cking activists and police.

There is no official data on the numbers but the results of police raids, combined with figures on repatriati­on of rescued women, suggest scores of women and underage girls are victims of organised human traffickin­g from South Asia to Kenya.

Latest figures from Nepal’s National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) showed 43 women and girls were repatriate­d from dance bars in Kenya and neighbouri­ng Tanzania in 2016/17.

There were no comparison numbers available.

To date there have been few prosecutio­ns to raise awareness about what authoritie­s fear is a growing trend, but April’s rescue and subsequent arrest threw a spotlight on the issue.

Spotlight on rising trend

The owner of the Mombasa club, Asif Amirali Alibhai Jetha, was charged with three counts of human traffickin­g, accused of harbouring victims for the purpose of deception, using premises to promote traffickin­g, and confiscati­on of passports.

The Canadian-British national denied the charges in court, pleading not guilty, saying the women were in Kenya of their own consent and legally employed as cultural dancers at a business with no erotic dancing or sexual exploitati­on.

He is currently on bail awaiting the next court hearing with no date yet set.

Common in India, so-called mujra dance bars – where young women dance to Bollywood music for money from male patrons – have mushroomed in cities including Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu, where there are countless Kenyans of South Asian descent.

Police and anti-traffickin­g groups have repeatedly voiced concerns that some of these private clubs are used as a front to ensnare women and girls, some in sex slavery, with women forced to pay off loans by erotic dancing or having sex with clients.

Sheela and the other women rescued from the Mombasa club told the Thomson Reuters Foundation they had not been forced to have sex with customers.

Anita Nyanjong, a lawyer for human rights group Equality Now, said it was hard to get to the truth as survivors of traffickin­g o en would not admit what had happened.

“Most victims come from poor conservati­ve families and there is shame and stigma attached to this kind of thing,” she said.

“Even though victims may have been forced or duped into sex work, they may be convinced by trafficker­s not to speak ... told they will be arrested for prostituti­on if they admit it.”

In Kenya, many local women and girls are promised good jobs only to be enslaved in domestic servitude or forced into prostituti­on - o en in the sex tourism industry.

Kenya is home to about 328,000 modern-day slaves – about 1 in 143 of its population - according to the Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation, an Australia-based rights group.

Police raids

But in recent years police raids on mujra bars – named a er a traditiona­l Asian dance – uncovered organised human traffickin­g from South Asia to Kenya, a trend highlighte­d by the United States in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons (TIP) report.

“The raids have helped us understand the modus operandi of trafficker­s in Kenya who have agents overseas to recruit women for them,” an official from Kenya’s Directorat­e of Criminal Investigat­ions (DCI) said on condition of anonymity. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A young Nepali woman, who was rescued by police from a dance bar in a suspected human traffickin­g case, sits in a safe house in Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa.
— Reuters photo A young Nepali woman, who was rescued by police from a dance bar in a suspected human traffickin­g case, sits in a safe house in Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa.

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