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No clear-cut trafficking trends
31/07/2007 23:28 - (SA)
Johannesburg - A senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Chandre Gould, says preliminary research suggests that human trafficking in the sex industry in Cape Town may not be as prevalent as first thought.
Gould said research by the ISS and the Sex Worker Education and Advocacy Taskforce (Sweat) focused on 140 Cape Town suburbs with a 54km radius of the city centre.
Focusing on brothels and sex workers advertised in the media, the ISS-Sweat research identified 103 brothels and nearly 1 000 sex workers. Nearly 250 outdoor workers were identified.
To date, 123 people in the industry had been interviewed, including brothel owners and prostitutes, and plans to interview 11 agencies employing foreign women were underway.
Unchecked exploitation of women
"The numbers probably aren't as high as we initially assessed them to be, but we still need to do something about it," said Gould.
The number of victims of trafficking who required assistance from the state were suggested to be "relatively few" and to form a "small percentage" of the population of the sex work industry.
While estimates of trafficking numbers were "huge", Gould said that four cases involving more than four people of trafficking or trafficking-like practices had been identified through interviews.
Preliminary findings also found that the illegal nature of prostitution allowed for unchecked exploitation of women and limited recourse.
Sex workers isolated from authorities
"We need to address the criminalisation of sex work to limit opportunities for trafficking and increase reporting and access to information," said Gould.
Decriminalisation would mean that sex work would become regulated like other work, she said.
A focus on trafficking was also said to distract from more complex broader social issues as presented by sex workers.
Gould argued that sex workers who were in similar exploitative situations were not considered worthy of assistance and support that was offered to the trafficking victims.
Sex workers were found to be isolated from authorities and services and that the "fluid industry" provided an important resource on abuse, exploitation and trafficking.
A guest at the same "sexploitation" seminar disputed the low prevalence of trafficking, saying that the issue was "much larger" than the report suggested.
Last month the International Organisation for Migration said its Southern African counter-trafficking assistance programme had found human trafficking was thriving in Southern Africa.
South Africa and its expanding sex industry were the main regional destination, the organisation said in a media report.
- SAPA
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