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Aleksandr Troyanov, left, commissioner
in the Far Eastern Regional Organized
Crime Unit in Khabarovsk; Viktoria Shchakina, an Irkutsk lawyer
who
works on issues of violence against
women; and Irina Mernenko,
coordinator of the St. Petersburg
Gender Center discuss their efforts
to curb the exploitation and trafficking
of Russian women.
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The myth of "pretty woman"
Russian women are victims of illegal
trafficking
By MIKHAILINA KARINA
In a 1997 survey of tenth-grade girls in Russia, 70 percent
responded their career goal was to become "foreign currency
prostitutes"; just 10 years before, respondents to a similar
survey said they wanted to become teachers, doctors, cosmonauts,
and actresses. Lyubov Vertinskaya, an expert on women's issues
in Murmansk, a northern Russian city near the Finnish and Swedish
borders, gave this disturbing statistic during a recent forum
on the illegal trafficking and exploitation of Russian women.
The trafficking of women across borders is a global problem,
said Sally Stoecker, project coordinator in AU's Transnational
Crime and Corruption Center (TraCCC). She moderated the March
11 forum that included 11 representatives from the media, women's
crisis centers, government, and law enforcement in Russia.
The movement of labor between borders is facilitated by technological
advances, such as the Internet, and the uncontrollable proliferation
of organized crime groups, Stoecker said. Since the collapse
of the Soviet Union, which took away guaranteed employment, subsidized
housing, and free medical care, half of the adult population
is without work and nearly 70 percent of the unemployed are women.
With the Russian economy in shambles, what are women to do?
Trafficking in women, as well as children, is a multimillion
dollar business in Russia and several former Soviet republics,
the panelists said. Women are often conned into signing contracts
to go abroad as exotic dancers, waitresses, or domestics. Once
they are illegally transported across the border by organized
crime groups, they are deprived of their passports, taken to
brothels-where they are beaten, raped, threatened-and are forced
to service up to 15 clients a day.
Aleksandr Troyanov, a law enforcement official from Khabarovsk,
a city on the border with China, said women from his city are
routinely taken to China, Japan, and Korea for prostitution.
Prosecuting organized crime groups that control this trade is
difficult because Russia lacks an adequate witness protection
program, and women are reluctant to testify for fear of reprisals.
The panelists said that prostitution is just one symptom of
the destroyed social fabric-moral and spiritual degradation-in
the former Soviet Union.
Just a few years ago, the word prostitute was considered a
swear word, said Vertinskaya. But today, with the average doctor's
or teacher's salary between $20 and $30 a month, women feel they
have no choice but to take a chance at questionable employment
abroad. These are educated women, in many cases; many have university
degrees and speak a foreign language. They suspect their work
may turn into prostitution, but panelists said they risk it out
of economic desperation.
And they go everywhere: the United States, Germany, Israel,
Turkey, Egypt, and the Netherlands are some of the common destinations.
In Murmansk, Vertinskaya said, this problem began almost innocently,
due to the easy access to Norway. A number of Russian women began
taking the bus to a small Norwegian town, where they spent the
weekend selling alcohol and souvenirs. Soon they were selling
their bodies as well, and bringing home large sums of money.
The news of this new enterprise spread among friends and as many
as 70 women began boarding the bus each weekend.
Interestingly, it was Norwegian women who alerted the Russian
authorities about Murmansk women seducing their husbands. The
story was made into a documentary that was broadcast all over
Russia-which resulted in women from other Russian cities going
to Murmansk to catch the Norway-bound bus. Most women go to Norway
to earn the money to feed their families; but many travel in
hopes of finding a man who will offer them a better life.
Prostitution with foreigners who pay in foreign currency was
glamorized in the early 1990s with a film Interdevochka, a Russian
version of Pretty Woman, which was extremely popular across Russia
and won international prizes. Ironically, this movie gave the
prostitution industry a huge boost.
The reality of Russian prostitution, however, lacks any cinematic
glamor. Women's magazines and newspapers have been publishing
harrowing, first-person accounts of women who were forced into
prostitution abroad. In addition, crisis centers offer psychological
and legal counseling services to women who have returned from
a foreign brothel.
The panelists agreed that the situation is grim and that Russian
society is just learning to address this problem. Many educational
programs, some of them funded by American organizations, target
at-risk groups and provide them with small-business training
and self-esteem workshops. Solving this problem will take a long
time, they predicted, but ignoring it is not an alternative.
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