'Older sex workers going hungry'
By
SALLY FRENCH - Manukau Courier | Tuesday, 05 February 2008
Underage prostitutes are forcing experienced sex workers to go
home hungry.
The young girls are
taking business away from women who have been working the streets for years,
says the Papatoetoe agency that helps prostitutes over 18 who want to leave the
sex industry.
Te Aronga Hou Inaianei
co-founder Mamatere Strickland says she has had to ask the Salvation Army to
get food parcels for mothers who haven’t "had any luck" because of
the number of young girls working.
"It’s a supply and
demand issue. The younger the supply, the more competition for the older
girls," the former sex worker says.
"I guess part of
that mentality is the younger they are, the less likely they are to have
infections.
"Older women are
going home with nothing. It’s been a sad Christmas for many of them – the
competition is just getting too much."
A sting by Counties
Manukau police in the past month resulted in 25 men being arrested for buying sex
from underage prostitutes.
Fifteen street workers,
some as young as 13, were taken off the streets during Operation Capio.
Mamatere says the
number of underage prostitutes is rising because of the Prostitution Reform
Act. "The act has taken police resources off the street and has therefore
sent the message to pimps and gangs that there are opportunities to get away
with things," she says.
Underage prostitutes
don’t dress up in high-heels, fishnet stockings and miniskirts, she says. The
girls wear their normal clothing but punters know they are working because they
frequent red-light areas after midnight.
She and her team give
out condoms and information packs with guidelines on how to keep safe while
working on the street.
Prostitutes are also
helped with housing and budgeting advice and are encouraged to seek other
employment or take part in educational training courses.
Those who want help for
their addictions are referred to drug and alcohol services.
Poverty has a role to
play in underage prostitution, Mamatere says.
"People are quick
to blame the families, but hang on a minute, we’ve got other influences out
there impacting on the children.
"P and other drugs
also turn family against family and a lot of loving families out there would be
broken-hearted to see that their child has gone down this road to
destruction."
But the problem won’t
be solved by police removing underage prostitutes from the street.
"It’s not about
moving them on. It’s about looking at the social, holistic approach to what’s
happening and trying to make change.
"Getting the
police to arrest them doesn’t solve the problem, they’ll just come back the
next night.
"I don’t know why
the government didn’t listen when we tried to tell them what would happen.
"Now we’ve got an
epidemic on our hands."
She hopes Operation
Capio will let people know south Auckland is not a paedophile haven for men
picking up "our" children.

CONCERNED:
Mamatere Strickland is worried about the growing number
of underage
prostitutes working in south Auckland.