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Sex
Slaves: Europe's Trade in Drugs, Guns and Women
by Preston Mendenhall,
MSNBC.com International Editor
VELESTA, Macedonia — Olga winced as she drew back the
bandage on her right breast, revealing an infected puncture
wound that hadn’t healed since a man bit her in a fit
of sexual rage. But the wound, for which the 19-year-old Moldovan
lacked even basic medicine, is only a small part of Olga’s
daily agony. For more than a year she has been held as a sex
slave in this town in western Macedonia, where human trafficking
flourishes and young girls are forced to endure the sexual
whims of thousands of men.
SITTING IN a brothel bedroom in Velesta, a town synonymous
with forced prostitution that police and experts consider
one of the most dangerous places in Europe, Olga said that
her “owner” would kill her for telling a reporter
about her state of captivity. But the cruel conditions under
which she is held, and her deteriorating mental and physical
health, compelled her to speak out. Her head hung in shame,
Olga’s dark brown eyes welled with tears. She brushed
back her long black hair, revealing a fair complexion flushed
with anger at her fate. “There is only one word for
this,” she said. “Slavery.”

Olga was interviewed secretly by MSNBC.com
while she was held against her will in a Macedonian brothel.
An untreated bite wound on her breast became infected.
Forced to have sex with as many as 10 men
every day, Olga and other women clandestinely interviewed
by MSNBC.com as part of a four-month investigation into the
sex trade in Europe, insisted that their real identities not
be revealed.
Their fears are not unfounded. Those brave enough to seek
help have been savagely beaten — and sometimes killed
— for trying to escape.
FLOURISHING SEX TRADE
Olga is one small cog in a huge transnational industry, and
Macedonia is merely a way station on a path to bondage that
begins in impoverished Eastern Europe and the chaotic states
that emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union, and stretches
to Western Europe, the Middle East and beyond.
In
Europe alone, officials estimate that more than 200,000 women
and girls — one-quarter of all women trafficked globally
— are smuggled out of Central and Eastern Europe and
the former Soviet republics each year, the bulk of whom end
up working as enslaved prostitutes. Almost half are transported
to Western Europe. Roughly a quarter end up in the United
States. Human rights activists say the numbers do not tell
the full story, because most women remain silent rather than
turn to frequently corrupt authorities for help.
The rapid rise of this sex slave trade can be traced to the
fall of the Soviet Union, where borders once heavily guarded
by the Red Army suddenly became porous and Soviet republics
and Eastern European satellites once in the Kremlin’s
grasp saw their industries and subsidies collapse overnight.
Millions of young women like Olga came of age amid this economic
misery. Their childhood fantasies of a better life in the
West soon became a human trafficker’s golden opportunity.
MOLDOVA’S MISERY
Nowhere is this trafficking worse than it is in Moldova, Olga’s
home, where experts estimate that since the fall of the Soviet
Union between 200,000 and 400,000 women have been sold into
prostitution — perhaps up to 10 percent of the female
population. The numbers are staggering, but for Liuba Revenko
of the International Organization for Migration in Moldova
the bondage of the country’s young women has become
routine. “Moldovans are a hybrid population of Russians,
Romanians, Jews, Ukrainians and Bulgarians,” Revenko
said. “That creates a special race of women that are
beautiful and in demand. They have no future. They are a good
target for the traffickers.”
In
Velesta, a town so small that the 120 Moldovan girls working
as prostitutes there make up a sizeable part of the population,
the sex slaves are rarely seen during the day. Kept under
lock and key in the back rooms of a dozen “kafane,”
or café-bars that double as brothels, they are summoned
by their owners when a customer arrives. Then the girls, most
in their late teens or early 20s, are paraded in skimpy lingerie
before clients who “pick us according to their tastes,”
said Irina, a Moldovan who answered a want-ad to be a waitress
in Italy, but ended up trapped in a Balkans brothel instead
of working in a restaurant in southern Sicily.
Rural Moldovan women, lacking education and desperate to escape,
are easy targets, activists say. Sometimes the bondage is
built around a debt that is impossible to pay off. Other times,
it is simply brutal captivity. They end up servicing clients
with the false hope of working off a “debt” to
their owners, who continue to entice them with real jobs in
Europe.
UNWITTING VICTIMS
The women’s tales of bondage are hauntingly similar.
Olga, the Moldovan with the breast wound, was virtually kidnapped
when she played hooky from school in rural Moldova. Initially,
she was drawn to the prospect of a new life in Italy —
far away from her alcoholic mother and abusive brother. But
the next thing she knew, a Serb smuggler called “Dragan”
was pulling her out of a car trunk in the Romanian town of
Timisoara, on the border with Yugoslavia. Dragan and his Romanian
pals loaded 10 girls on a boat to cross the Danube. After
a few days in a basement near Belgrade, Olga was led across
the Serbian frontier with Macedonia — under the eyes
of obliging border guards — and brought to Velesta.
“There were clients on the very first night,”
she said. With no passport and little idea where she was,
Olga was raped, beaten into submission and humiliated until
she no longer had the will to challenge her horrible fate.
“Meti made me clean the toilet with my tongue. It was
horrible and dirty. I think they did it because I was the
newest girl,” Olga said of her ethnic Albanian owner.
“He made me lick another girl’s … you know,
down there. And then he laughed.”
Young and beautiful, Olga has stayed in Velesta longer than
most trafficked women, many of whom are moved on into Albania
and Greece after the local population “breaks them in
or gets tired of them,” Olga said. Once they reach the
Albanian coast, they are easily trafficked to Italy, where
the European Union’s lax border controls allow them
to be smuggled deep inside the continent.
BILLIONS IN PROFITS
Ten years of wars in the Balkans have turned the region into
a trafficking highway paved with lawlessness and corruption
that has prompted former enemies — Bosnian Muslims,
Serbs and ethnic Albanians — to set aside ethnic rivalries
in the name of vast profits. “You’re talking about
big international organizations,” said Rudolf Perina,
a former U.S. ambassador to Moldova who was involved in Washington-funded
anti-trafficking efforts.
Ethnic Albanian rebels in Kosovo, Macedonia and south Serbia
— long the masters of drug running in the Balkans —
are deeply involved in the human smuggling business, using
the flesh trade to fund their separatist movements.

Luisa was rescued
in a raid on brothels in western Macedonia.
Luisa, a 32-year-old single Moldovan mother whose neighbor
persuaded her to accept a job in Italy and “marry a
rich Roman,” found herself repeatedly raped by her “owner,”
Dilaver Bojku, an ethnic Albanian trafficking kingpin from
Velesta. European law enforcement officials say Bojku, one
of the sex trade’s “Most Wanted,” has used
cash and, reportedly, contacts with ethnic Albanian rebels
to avoid arrest for years. “He bought me for $700,”
Luisa said.
She was freed in a police raid on Velesta, after MSNBC.com
confronted Macedonia’s interior minister, Ljube Boskovski,
with tales of sex slavery only a few hours’ drive from
his office in the capital of Skopje. But Olga and other women
who took great risk to speak about their predicament were
nowhere to be found.
The Macedonian SWAT team that raided bars
called Coca Cola, Safari and Bela Dona was only partly successful.
Tipped off to the raids, brothel owners had spirited girls
out secret exits in the backrooms of the bars and hidden them
in the woods behind the buildings. The sheets on the beds
were still warm. With the exception of a few minor pimps,
the kingpins like Bojku escaped.
LACK OF LAWS
The raid on Velesta was the first by Macedonian police, long
wary of upsetting the uneasy peace between the country’s
Macedonian Slavs and ethnic Albanian minority.

Ljube Boskovski,
the hard-line Macedonian interior minister
Even Boskovski admitted his own policemen were on the smugglers’
payroll, making it virtually impossible to surprise the traffickers
and rescue their sex slaves. Boskovski also complained about
a lack of laws to keep traffickers behind bars. “The
punishments are not really severe,” he said. In an interview
with MSNBC.com, Vitalie Curarari, the head of Moldova’s
anti-trafficking police, lashed out at the media for “sensationalizing”
sex slavery and placed much of the blame for trafficking on
the women themselves. “Fifty percent of our women just
go abroad to find another man and then come back to divorce
their husbands,” Curarari said.
IN THE HEART OF EUROPE
Farther along the trafficking pipeline, hundreds of women
and girls are smuggled into Europe every day and forced onto
the streets of cities like Hamburg, Paris, London and Amsterdam.
Amsterdam, a city synonymous with hedonism, is perhaps best
known for its legalized sex industry, in which prostitutes
pay taxes and undergo regular health exams. The city’s
Red Light District is a virtual Disneyland of sex —
with only European Union passport holders allowed to ply the
trade.
But only a few miles’ drive from the city center, traditional
Dutch tolerance is helping fuel the trafficking problem. In
Theemsweg, a fenced-in, football field-sized parking lot built
by the government for unregulated sex workers, girls sit in
bus shelters — also courtesy of the government —
waiting for clients. There are no EU citizens here —
and the prostitutes’ countries of origin are strikingly
familiar: Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, Romania, Bulgaria, Czech
Republic. On weekends, men looking for cheap sex wait in cars
that back up for a mile. Sexual encounters, which take place
right in the cars, cost $20.
SMUGGLED INTO EUROPE
Asked how she got to Theemsweg, 20-year-old Anna from Russia’s
Far East said, “You don’t want to know.”
Dutch police officials, speaking privately, estimate that
as many as 70 percent of the prostitutes in the Netherlands
are working illegally, using false documents provided by smugglers
to skirt Dutch and European laws.
With
the women facing poor odds, activists are working overtime
to try to thwart traffickers and rescue some of the thousands
of sex slaves in Europe. The International Organization for
Migration, backed by U.S. funding, has managed to return only
400 of the perhaps hundreds of thousands of Moldovan women
victimized by the sex trade. Activists are beating a path
to rural areas to educate young girls about the dangers of
the trade.
Twenty-one-year-old Natasha, a single mother, considers herself
one of the lucky ones. She escaped Velesta, where her clients
included NATO soldiers from Germany, France, Britain and the
United States who were stationed in Macedonia for peacekeeping
duties. It was an Albanian client who took pity on Natasha
and bought her from her owner for 5,000 Deutsche Marks, about
$2,500. “Yes, I’m back in Moldova, but it’s
difficult,” she said in a village three hours north
of the Moldovan capital, Chisinau. “We do not have money
to buy bread. We do not have money to pay for the electricity.”
For Olga, tending to her sore breast in captivity, anything
sounds better than Velesta. “What kind of animal can
do this to me?” she demanded, tears streaming down her
face. “All of Macedonia is filled with girls like me,
and we’re all crying.”
Continue to
One Night in Velesta >>
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