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http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1186519,00.html?promoid=rss
_top
The Missing Girls of Iraq
BRIAN BENNETT

Sex trafficking, virtually nonexistent under Saddam Hussein, has resurfaced
in Iraq. TIME reports on a seldom-discussed epidemic: girls being kidnapped
and sold to brothels

BAGHDAD, Saturday, Apr. 22, 2006

The man on the phone with the 14-year-old Iraqi girl called himself Sa'ad.
He was calling long distance from Dubai and telling her wonderful things
about the place. He was also about to buy her. Safah, the teenager, was well
aware of the impending transaction. In the weeks after she was kidnapped and
imprisoned in a dark house in Baghdad's middle-class Karada district, Safah
heard her captors haggling with Sa'ad over her price. It was finally settled
at $10,000. Staring at a floor strewn with empty whiskey bottles, the orphan
listened as Sa'ad described the life awaiting her: a beautiful home,
expensive clothes, parties with pop stars. Why, she'd be joining two other
very happy teenage Iraqi girls living with Sa'ad in his harem. Safah knew
that she was running out of time. A fake passport with her photo and assumed
name had already been forged for her. But even if she escaped, she had no
family who would take her in. She was even likely to end up in prison. What
was she to do? Safah is part of a seldom-discussed aspect of the epidemic of
kidnappings in Iraq: sex trafficking. No one knows how many young women have
been kidnapped and sold since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. The
Organization for Women's Freedom in Iraq, based in Baghdad, estimates from
anecdotal evidence that more than 2,000 Iraqi women have gone missing in
that period. A Western official in Baghdad who monitors the status of women
in Iraq thinks that figure may be inflated but admits that sex trafficking,
virtually nonexistent under Saddam, has become a serious issue. The collapse
of law and order and the absence of a stable government have allowed
criminal gangs, alongside terrorists, to run amuck. Meanwhile, some aid
workers say, bureaucrats in the ministries have either paralyzed with red
tape or frozen the assets of charities that might have provided refuge for
these girls. As a result, sex trafficking has been allowed to fester
unchecked.

"It is a problem, definitely," says the official, who has heard specific
reports from Iraqi aid workers about girls being kidnapped and sold to
brothels. "Unfortunately, the security situation doesn't allow us to follow
up on this." The U.S. State Department's June 2005 trafficking report says
the extent of the problem in Iraq is "difficult to appropriately gauge" but
cites an unknown number of Iraqi women and girls being sent to Yemen, Syria,
Jordan and Persian Gulf countries for sexual exploitation. Statistics are
further made murky by tribal tradition. Families are usually so shamed by
the disappearance of a daughter that they do not report kidnappings. And the
resulting stigma of compromised chastity is such that even if the girl
should resurface, she may never be taken back by her relations. A visit to
the Khadamiyah Women's Prison in the northern part of Baghdad immediately
produces several tales of abduction and abandonment. A stunning 18-year-old
nicknamed Amna, her black hair pulled back in a ponytail, says she was taken
from an orphanage by an armed gang just after the U.S. invasion and sent to
brothels in Samarra, al-Qaim on the border with Syria, and Mosul in the
north before she was taken back to Baghdad, drugged with pills, dressed in a
suicide belt and sent to bomb a cleric's office in Khadamiyah, where she
turned herself in to the police. A judge gave her a seven-year jail sentence
"for her sake" to protect her from the gang, according to the prison
director.

Two other girls, Asmah, 14, and Shadah, 15, were taken all the way to the
United Arab Emirates before they could escape their kidnappers and report
them to a Dubai police station. The sisters were then sent back to Iraq but,
like many other girls who have escaped their kidnappers and buyers, were
sent to prison because they carried fake passports. There, they wait for the
bureaucracy to sort out their innocence. What happened to the gang that took
them? The sisters hear rumors that the men paid their way out of jail and
are back on the streets. "I don't know what to do if the prison
administration decides to release me," says Asmah, pushing back her gray
head scarf to adjust her black hair. "We have no one to protect us." Women's
advocates are trying to set up halfway houses for kidnap survivors. The
locations are secret to keep the women safe from both trafficking gangs
trying to cover their tracks and outraged relatives who may try to kill the
women to restore their clans' reputation. But the new Iraqi government has
set up several bureaucratic roadblocks. Even organizations that do not
receive government money have to secure permission from four ministries and
the Baghdad city council for every shelter they hope to operate. Wringing
her hands in exasperation, activist Yanar Mohammed says, "They want to close
our women's shelter and deny our ability to open more."

That means that for girls like Safah, there are few havens left in Baghdad.
In 2003, after Safah's father died, her grandmother took her to House of
Children No. 2 orphanage in Adhamiya without the knowledge of most of her
family. At the orphanage, she was befriended by an affable nurse who spent
hours chatting up Safah, a fresh-faced girl whose fingers are still pudgy
with baby fat. The nurse's modest hijab framed a sweet face that made Safah
feel that the nurse was a good, spiritual woman, one she could trust. The
nurse convinced Safah that she could be killed over the shame her
disappearance had brought to her family. The nurse offered to adopt her. But
official channels would have taken too long, so the nurse told Safah to hold
her lower-right abdomen, scream and writhe on the carpet of the orphanage
director's office, pretending to have appendicitis and requiring emergency
medical assistance. Once at the hospital, the nurse whisked Safah into a
waiting car.

The next three weeks were the worst in Safah's life. "I was tortured and
beaten and insulted a lot in that house," Safah says. She wouldn't provide
many details about what happened in the whiskey-soaked den in Karada. But
she says that when it became apparent to her that she was about to be sold
to Sa'ad, the man on the phone from Dubai, she became desperate. She passed
word of her confinement to a neighborhood boy, who reported it to the local
police station. Officers raided the place and arrested the nurse.
Bureaucratic red tape somehow kept Safah and the nurse in the same prison
for six months before Safah was finally released back into the custody of
the orphanage a month ago.

At the orphanage, nestled behind a 10-ft. wall on the breezy banks of the
Tigris, Safah can take computer classes, practice sewing and paint portraits
of the family she wishes she had. But she doesn't feel as safe as she used
to there. A social worker tells her that the nurse wasn't at the Khadamiyah
Women's Prison during her last visit. Suddenly Safah rushes out of the room,
crying and beating her head with her hands in the hallway. "If she is
released," says Safah, her eyes darting back and forth in a panic, "I'm not
staying here." But deep down she knows she has nowhere else to go. —With
reporting by Yousif Basil and Assad Majeed/ Baghdad
>From the May. 01, 2006 issue of TIME magazine





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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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