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WSWS : News
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: Bangladesh
Bangladesh government crackdown on women engaged in prostitution
By Nandana Nanneththi
27 August 1999
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In the midst of criticism of a witch-hunt launched by the government
on women engaged in prostitution, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheik
Hasina Wajed held a meeting with newspaper editors on August 20
to justify her government's stand.
While admitting that "poverty, hunger and social deprivation"
forced women into prostitution, the prime minister said her government
would impose harsh rules on brothels and attacked human rights
groups which opposed the victimisation of prostitutes.
Prostitution is one of the foremost social questions in Bangladesh,
where hundreds of thousands of women and children have been forced
into the profession because they have no other means of survival.
For nearly three months Sheik Hasina's government has been
taking steps to evict women from the 150-year-old Tanbazar and
Nimtal brothels, where at least 7,000 women engaged in prostitution
are housed. More than 700 women evicted from these brothels have
been detained at three vagrant centres in Narayanganj and Gazipur.
They are being kept in subhuman conditions.
Twenty-five women were injured when employees of the Kashimpur
vagrant centre attacked a procession of detainees to protest against
poor standards at the centre and inadequate food. A Bangladeshi
newspaper reported that these attacks, which occurred on August
10, lasted for three hours and the women were mercilessly beaten
and insulted. They received no medical care, which increased their
suffering.
Human rights groups charge that officials of the Home Ministry
in charge of eviction and "rehabilitation" have started
to release some women back to the flesh traders.
The incidents at Kashimpur vagrant centre reveal the real face
of the so-called "rehabilitation" campaign and expose
the hypocrisy behind Sheik Hasina's rhetoric about morality.
Earlier, on July 30, representatives of human rights groups
were brutally attacked by police and thugs backed by government
politicians when they marched against the forcible eviction and
detention of women from the Tanbazar and Nimtal brothels. The
AFP news agency reported that some 40 women activists were
injured. The attack took place near the Narayanganj police station.
After approvingly watching the assault by the thugs, the police
joined in with sticks and tear gas.
On the same day the women detained at vagrant centres were
attacked when they protested to demand their release. Some detainees
threatened to commit suicide if they were not freed.
Some Islamic religious organisations have extended support
to the government's move against these women in the name of protecting
"moral values". The District Imart Association in Narayanganj
demanded that the government not to give in to non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) "supporting prostitution".
Recently, when a young woman in a brothel was murdered by her
customer, the priests refused to perform the last rites. After
three days her friends had to bury her decomposing body.
Oppressive conditions for women in Bangladesh have been exacerbated
by the poverty and hunger which are pervasive in the country.
Some 53 percent of the population live below the poverty line,
35.6 percent of the labour force is unemployed, 63 percent of
the population cannot read or write, and annual per capita income
is US$270. According to a report of one NGO, 200,000 women and
children have been smuggled across the country's borders to be
sold into prostitution and slavery.
Details about the condition of children in Bangladesh, given
in a report published by UNICEFStatus of the World's
Children 1997are revealing. In 1992 more than 75,000
children were working in the garment industry in Bangladesh, the
majority of whom were girls. Of these children, 40 percent were
10 to 12 years old.
In 1992 the US Senate passed a resolution banning the import
of garments whose production involved child labour. The following
year Bangladesh businessmen eliminated 50,000 children from the
industry. According to the UNICEF report, most of the retrenched
children were forced to engage in "street jobs", stone
breaking and prostitution.
According to another NGO report, Bangladesh police had by June
20 of this year raped 17 women, killed 72 and wounded another
207.
The witch-hunt against women involved in prostitution by the
Bangladeshi government is not an isolated move. Together with
the moral crusade against prostitution, the government has unleashed
an attack on slum dwellers in the capital city, Dhaka. The government
says it wants to clear slum areas in order to eradicate "drug
peddlers, smugglers, killers and prostitutes".
There are 74 slum districts in Dhaka, home to 2.6 million poor
people. According to official estimates there are 4 million slum
dwellers in all of Bangladesh.
On August 9, Dhaka authorities, with the help of 800 police
and paramilitary troops, bulldozed 2,000 slum dwellings, forcing
10,000 poor people to the street. When on August 12 hundreds of
people barricaded a street in Dhaka to protest, the police attacked
the people and arrested dozens.
Facing mass protests and media criticism, the Hasina government
claimed it had plans to "rehabilitate" the slum dwellers
by sending them to rural areas. This claim was absurd on its face,
since most of the slum dwellers had migrated to Dhaka in the first
place to escape crushing poverty in the countryside.
In reality Hasina is seeking to eliminate socially explosive
concentrations of poverty in the capital city, while freeing up
land that can be exploited by real estate interests and businesses,
both local and foreign-based.
See Also:
Bangladesh budget heaps on
more burdens as poverty grows
[9 July 1999]
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