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Sex
for soap, salt and sugar
IRIN
News
July 29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79499
The border between
South Africa and Zimbabwe is more than an international boundary;
it also determines the method of payment for sex workers, because
on one side cash is taken, while on the other, goods are bartered.
The South African frontier
town of Musina is a regional trucking hub that has long been a haunt
of sex workers, who use the boredom of truck drivers waiting for
their cargo to be cleared by customs as a window of opportunity.
"Women tempt us.
They come here in their short skirts and tight jeans and ask us
if we want to have a good time," a Zimbabwean truck driver,
who declined to be identified, told IRIN. "Naturally, as men,
at times it is tough to say, 'no'. I use protection whenever I have
sex with a woman."
The transmission of HIV/AIDS
among truck drivers has been recognized as an important factor in
spreading the virus, and the US Agency for International Development
(USAID) has targeted Musina for HIV/AIDS awareness education since
1999, as part of their "Corridors of Hope" project.
"Shayela nge condom"
("drive with a condom" in the Zulu language) says a mural
at the Musina taxi rank, while other wall paintings shout the advice:
"Play it safe, AIDS kills" and "Don't take a chance,
always use a condom."
Susan - one of the sex
workers frequenting the truck parks, who charges R50 (US$6.50) for
"a short time" and R150 (US$19.50) for the night - told
IRIN that the growing number of sex workers was making it difficult
to get these rates. "At times, I can settle for R100 ((US$13)
for the night. It is better than nothing - there are more women
here."
Another Zimbabwean truck
driver, who identified himself only as Dube, said there were now
more sex workers from Zimbabwe, and he did not know where truck
drivers could get free condoms.
"The situation in
Zimbabwe has seen more women trying to make quick money by offering
their services to us [in South Africa]. They just want money that
will enable them to take care of their families back home,"
he said.
"The women in South
Africa are expensive, but across the border in Zimbabwe you can
have a great time for a few bars of soap, and goods like salt and
sugar."
Zimbabwe's economy is
in meltdown, with more than 80 percent unemployment and an annual
inflation rate officially estimated at 2.2 million percent, although
some independent economists have put it at about 12 million percent.
South Africa, the continent's
economic powerhouse, has become a magnet for Zimbabweans seeking
work and an escape from the grinding poverty at home. More than
three million Zimbabweans - around a quarter of the population -
are thought to have left the country since 2000 for neighboring
states, or further afield for England, Canada and Australia.
The 1999 Corridors of
Hope research project, carried out before Zimbabwe's crisis, noted
that "The HIV vulnerability of young women, including schoolgirls
and young vendors, who seek an income from commercial or casual
sex with truckers and other groups of older men with income, is
distressingly high."
The report said there
were at least 400 permanent, full-time sex workers, and another
300 transient sex workers who visited the town at peak times. "The
youngest are aged 15. Most sex workers stay in the informal settlements
or low-income suburbs and travel to the border to solicit truckers
at the border truck stop."
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