- Baghdad Street Action Dated Added: Thu Dec 22 2005 Submitted by: Helping The Hobbyist Community
A Dangerous Trade--late November, 2005
Once protected by Saddam's regime, prostitutes now fear for their lives.
Salima Jabar dresses as a peasant when she goes to the market near Baghdad Gate to sell produce. But the prices she charges for fruits and vegetables are shockingly high.
A kilogramme of tomatoes costs 20,000 dinars (about 13 US dollars), she told this reporter. "A kilo of apples," she said cooly, "goes for 25,000."
She then turned towards three young women, aged 18 to 25, who work with her at the market. The produce is her cover, and they are her actual product.
It’s not known how many prostitutes work in Baghdad or how many have been killed or threatened. But prostitutes, community leaders and police reported that prostitution has significantly changed in the capital. Once an open secret, the business is now run as an underground operation.
Jabar, a 50-year-old madam who has worked as a prostitute for a decade, has not always run her ring covertly.
During Saddam's time, she said, she and her women serviced - and were protected by - Ba'athists. She described it as "a paradise. We played with money."
Today, the fees have significantly declined and the threats have risen. The deteriorating security situation and the increasing power of Islamists have forced Jabar and other prostitutes to move their businesses from areas like Kamalia and Abu Ghraib outside of Baghdad to busy residential neighbourhoods, particularly the Baghdad Gate area.
In one day during the Saddam era, prostitutes, she said, could rake in as much as 700 dollars, but now they struggle to earn 100 dollars for seven customers, because security is poor and incomes have declined. The "most beautiful," she said, sought opportunities in the Gulf and Syria because they can make more money, or at least work under safer conditions.
Jabar left the Kamalia area after she received two death threats and heard about other prostitutes being killed. She still fears that an Islamist will kill her or one of her women.
"They regard themselves as God," she said. "They have no mercy."
A source in the ministry of justice who asked to remain anonymous said the government is not investigating the killing of prostitutes. He said that authorities believe fundamentalist groups and militias are threatening prostitutes but officials are unwilling to confront them about the issue.
Omar Jasim, a 45-year-old police officer who patrols the Baghdad Gate area, said he and his colleagues "knew all of the prostitutes in every area" under Saddam.
He is aware that prostitutes, under threat from Islamists, now pose as vegetable sellers or day labourers. But he does not track them, arguing that police have bigger problems. "We protect ourselves rather than going after prostitutes," he said.
He and others expressed concern that by moving into residential areas, pimps are introducing women desperate to make some money to the trade.
A ministry of labour report released in July estimated that 58 per cent of Iraq's population is female, and that women have had to carry heavy financial burdens as a result. Iraq's male population began declining during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s and has continued due to fighting and terrorism.
Even women from respectable families are turning to prostitution, according to Suad Khalaf, a 30-year-old social worker in Baghdad. "The social structure is crumbling" under war and worsening economic conditions, she said.
Fadhila Jasim, 45, has been a prostitute for 18 years. She works in the Battaween region in downtown Baghdad, a slum known for its gangs and prostitutes since Saddam’s rule.
She said some women today have no choice but to sell their bodies.
"They will either die of hunger or become prostitutes," she said.
She tries to protect herself by relying on a small circle of clients whom she trusts and usually goes to their homes rather than brothels or hotels. She refuses new clients, even if they are recommended by current customers.
Opinions vary on how to address prostitution, which many fear will only increase if Iraq does not stabilise.
Khalaf argued that the government should allow polygamy so that women have providers, with men who marry two widows provided state benefits.
Najih al-Kanani, a sheikh with the Shia al-Ansari mosque in Baghdad's al-Huriyah neighbourhood, argued that if women became more religious they would not become prostitutes, saying that he has had some success in persuading the latter to lead more respectable lives. "We were able to guide many prostitutes to the right path," he said.
At the other extreme, Sufian Sa'ad, a 28-year-old lawyer who is concerned about the safety of prostitutes in Iraq, said prostitution should be legalised as was the case under the monarchy in the early part of the last century. He argued that this is safer because prostitutes are checked for diseases. "They are human beings, not animals," he said. "They have rights."
(Review # 13406)
- Sulaymaniyya, Northern Iraq Street Action Dated Added: Fri Jul 01 2005 Submitted by: Helping The Hobbyist Community
IRAQ: POLICE BLAME PROSTITUTES FOR SPREAD OF AIDS
Erbil, 1 July (AKI) - Police in Sulaymaniyya in northern Iraq have tightened controls to combat prostitution which they say is responsible for the growing number of AIDS cases in the Kurdish administered city, despite Iraqi health ministry officials saying not a single new case of AIDS has been registered there. Police sources claim that they have identified 60 cases of people infected with the HIV virus, which causes AIDS, in the city where the disease was previously virtually unknown.
Prostitution has been on the rise in Sulaymaniyya thanks to the relatively calm security situation in the city and the rest of Iraqi Kurdistan.
Police sources blamed certain "parties" without identifying them, for bringing HIV positive prostitutes to the city.
But the health ministry officials, rejected the claims, saying that only three cases of HIV infected people have been identified in Sulaymaniyya.
(Review # 11890)
- Baghdad Other Dated Added: Tue Dec 21 2004 Submitted by: Helping The Hobbist Community
Here is a fascinating and sociologically important article about a very troubled part of the world which you will find very informative. Baghdad prostitutes fall on hard times 30/11/2004 IWPR - By Hussein Ali After decades of semi-official tolerance, prostitutes are under attack from local residents’ groups and religious extremists. The disappearance of the protection that prostitutes once enjoyed under Saddam Hussein’s regime has led to a vigilante campaign against the world’s oldest profession. In the vacuum left by Iraq’s still undeveloped police service, local residents and Islamic vigilantes are taking the law into their own hands to close down brothels and drive prostitutes out of residential neighbourhoods. Prostitution flourished largely unchecked under Saddam’s regime, and officials not only turned a blind eye to it but also made up a large part of the clientele. With members of the Baathist government and security agencies as regular customers, prostitutes in Baghdad were assured protection as well as payment for their services. After the fall of the regime in 2003, that protection disappeared and angry residents across Baghdad took matters into their own hands, forcing prostitutes out of their neighbourhoods. In summer last year, people in the Abu Ghraib district west of Baghdad destroyed homes in a nearby gypsy encampment, where they said prostitution had been rife under the Baathists. "We finally managed to get rid of them. They disrupted our lives for years under Saddam with their wild all-night parties,” said Kareem Saad, a taxi driver from Abu Ghraib. “We’re an Islamic society and we want to protect our families.” For Hamza Omar, who owns a drapery shop in Baghdad’s Karrada neighbourhood, business has picked up since the prostitutes who worked in his neighbourhood were made to leave. "In Saddam’s time, the women would stand outside my shop soliciting clients, and then have sex with them in their cars,” he said. “It was very embarrassing for families shopping in my store. Now they’ve gone. There aren’t even any prostitutes in residential areas anymore because the locals expelled them.” While residents feel they are acting in the best interests of their community, the typical methods employed to deal with the issue are heavy handed. “There was a prostitute working in our area who used to be protected by the Baathists,” said postal worker Azhar Anwar. “The local mosque sent an armed group to get rid of her and now she has gone.” Tales of prostitutes being beaten or threatened with violence to get them to move away are commonplace. In one of the most extreme cases that IWPR heard about, a group of residents in the al-Khaleej district of Baghdad called in the Mahdi Army, the militia force loyal to firebrand Shia cleric Muqtada al Sadr, to expel a family who were said to be prostituting their children. “We went to the Zahraa mosque and asked men from the Mahdi Army to help us get rid of that family. Three days later, they were gone and our area is now clean,” recounted Haider Jabbar, a local supermarket owner. But even with such negative attitudes towards prostitution, the basic principles of supply and demand mean that the trade still pays. After being moved on, most of the city’s sex workers have congregated in areas where it is still tolerated. While Islamists vilify them as wanton and immoral, the majority of Baghdad’s prostitutes were driven to the work by necessity. Many say they were shunned by their families for having sex out of wedlock or some other social misdemeanour. Others were forced into it in an attempt to support themselves and their families. Nadia Mahmood, a bleached blonde originally from the Kurdish region, works in the red light district of Bataween, where brothels are still in business. "I have five children and I had to support them somehow. I got desperate under the [United Nations] sanctions and I begged store owners to give me credit. Instead, they offered to give me goods in exchange for sex,” she explained tearfully. “I had no alternative. I have to pay the rent and provide for my kids.” Mahmood’s colleague, who introduced herself as Batta - or Swan - says she has grown inured to the job, "I had to leave my family after I had sex with my lover and he then refused to marry me. I’ve been here five years. I’ve got used to it. Anyway, no one else would employ me.” While sex work has always involved risk, sex workers in Bataween now face an additional threat. “I have to come here to get money to support my children, but it’s becoming more and more dangerous,” said Mahmood. “We are well aware that Islamic extremists might bomb this area at any time.” Hussein Ali and Ali Marzook are IWPR trainees. (Review # 10627)
- Baghdad Escort Review Dated Added: Thu Jan 31 2002 Submitted by: ArabLover
I occasionally visit Iraq through Jordan. I must say due to poor economy of Iraq a lot of hookers can be found in Baghdad. Most will offer you sex when they know you are a foreigner.~~~~Iraqi women are famous in Middle East for prostitution. Those who are lucky are in Dubai. But most end up as hookers for the few rich people in Baghdad.~~~~A visit to any of the hotels can find you hookers. There are pubs and discos where they look for customers. Most are very pretty. Before Persian Gulf War these Iraqi women had customers from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Now they want to find any Europeans for the cash value.~~~~Baghdad is definately a great sex place now. Its just hard to get into Iraq. But the hookers are in abundance.~~ (Review # 4978)
- Baghdad Travel Report Dated Added: Wed Jan 03 2001 Submitted by: Nigga
All I can tell you guyz is be careful, their government is pretty f**ed-up, the Iraqi commandos recently chopped-off 500 heads all pimps, hookers, ect. You don't believe me? check Reuters news agency just to make sure that I'm not bullshitting. (Review # 2931)
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