[EKIMEEZA GOSSIP NEWS] – The world has long been fighting a war
against female genital mutilation of young women, with little success.
But as
Pius Opae Papa reports, some women from
Uganda appear to be enjoying controversial advantages because they
escaped the circumcision knife as girls.
In the most unlikely place, Kenyan tribes’ insistence on cultural
practices is preventing its women from competing in the world’s oldest
profession – prostitution. Kenya’s Kalenjin and Bukusu tribes practice
female genital mutilation (FGM), while in Uganda it is being vigorously
fought among the Sabiny of Kapchorwa.
Consequently, in the border town of Malaba, truck drivers are
choosing Ugandan women over their Kenyan counterparts as sexual
partners. They are now smuggling Ugandan women to the Kenyan side, or
crossing the border to hunt for the Ugandan sex workers. Bashir Kamudu, a
truck driver, insists that Kalenjin and Bukusu sex workers, who are
readily available on the Kenyan side of Malaba, are exceptionally
attractive but boring in bed. Kamudu blames FGM for his preference of
Ugandan women.
Yusuf Omondi, another truck driver, agrees with Kamudu; but he adds
that not only have Kenyan sex workers been tampered with by illiterate
village ‘surgeons’, they are also too expensive. Kenyan prostitutes
charge between KShs 300 (Ushs 8,000) and Kshs 1,000 (about UShs 28,000)
per hour, compared to their Ugandan counterparts who charge between Ushs
2,000 and Shs 5,000 for same duration.
Apart from not practising FGM, in which the labia are cut off,
Ugandan women are also known to elongate the labia, a matter that is
thought to make them more attractive to their sexual partners. Allen, a
28-year-old Ugandan sex worker, who has practised her trade in Malaba
for 11 years, agrees that her compatriots are in high demand, compared
to Kenyan women.
“It’s not our problem that their own men and truck drivers are abandoning them and choose to look for us,” says Allen.
Allen sometimes earns up to Shs 50,000 a night, and sometimes up to
Shs 500,000 – when dollar-paying Somali truck drivers flood the area.
Because of the fierce ‘international’ competition, however, Ugandan sex
workers have to hide from Kenyan rivals, by pretending to be clearing
agents, in order to provide their services on the Kenyan side of the
border.
It is estimated that there are over 500 sex workers camped in Malaba
earning an average living through the night business of prostitution.
They service the hundreds of truck drivers using the customs point.
Medical explanation
A gynaecologist, Dr Pauline Nassolo, agrees with the Kenyan men that
mutilated women may be a turn-off for men during sexual intercourse,
because the organs of sexual stimulation are cut off during
circumcision.
Mutilated women, she says, are also colder. She adds that mutilated
women rarely enjoy sex, which may explain why some men find them boring.
Both Uganda and Kenya have ratified several international protocols
against FGM. These include a December 2012 resolution by the United
Nations General Assembly, declaring FGM an abuse of rights of women and a
threat to the health of women and girls. UN figures from 2010 indicate
that FGM is declining, although it still affects about 100 million to
140 million women and girls worldwide.
Illegal trade
Although prostitution is illegal in both Kenya and Uganda, there have
been attempts by local authorities in Malaba to legalise the oldest
profession. Authorities in Malaba-Kenya passed a bye-law in 2004,
legalizing sex work and setting up a tax that prostitutes had to pay to
operate there.
Commercial sex workers were required to pay KShs 9,000 (Shs 252,000)
per year for a licence. However, the sex workers reneged on the deal,
after some men in Malaba threatened a boycott, arguing that prostitutes
had increased their charges. Malaba town chief John Ikileng then
threatened to close all the unlicensed sex shops in the town, if the sex
workers refused to pay the annual operating tax.
However, the men then threatened to take legal action against
Ikileng, arguing that the bye-law contravened the penal code and
Constitution, and was also against the women’s human rights. With his
back against the wall, Ikileng succumbed and the law was scrapped from
the law books.
Challenges
Since then, prostitution has faced challenges both for those
practising it and those supposed to stop it. Apart from the harassment
from her Kenyan competitors, Allen cites incessant police patrols at
night as a hindrance to their business. She says the police extort a lot
of money from them to allow them stay on the streets – fees sometimes
collected in kind.
“The policemen patrolling at night sometimes come as clients but
after offering them the services, they threaten to arrest us and close
our operating zones, but there is nowhere we can report these cases
because we fear to be arrested,” Allen explains.
However, other sex workers, who declined to be named, said they hoped
that if borders were removed, under the East African Community, they
would be able to operate without harassment.
The sex workers also want prostitution legalized across the region, as they say they use it to look after their families.
Cause of cross-border prostitution
According to Charles Ojulo, a social worker and counsellor with North
Star, an NGO rehabilitating former prostitutes and HIV/Aids patients in
Malaba, endemic poverty is behind prostitution. He explains that
several frustrated women see it as an easy way out of poverty.
Ojulo tells of several cases where a young girl’s parents die, and
the resulting desperation forces her into prostitution to earn a living.
He adds that some girls and women, who arrived at the border as
victims of the violence that followed the 2007 elections in Kenya, have
never returned home for fear of retribution and have turned to
prostitution.