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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU!3ZLUFUR
- Organization: Central Michigan University
- Message-ID: <930126.083548.EST.3ZLUFUR@CMUVM>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 08:35:48 EST
- Sender: Southeast Asia Discussion List <SEASIA-L@MSU.BITNET>
- From: Elliott Parker <3ZLUFUR@CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU>
- Subject: TH: Flesh trader
- Lines: 118
-
- ======================= Forwarded Message ===========================
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 23:10:56+0700
- From: Kamol Hengkietisak <kamol@ipied.tu.ac.th>
- Subject: Bangkok Post Jan 17: Sunday Enquiry
-
- 17: Sunday Post Enquiry Part III
-
-
-
- `Phayao flesh trader': My business is `a kind of merit-making'
-
- AT the age of 40, Dej (not his real name) is a successful
- businessman in Phayao Province -- thanks to the booming sex
- industry.
-
- Dej, who runs a food garden outside the town proper of the
- province known to be a major exporter of sex workers, now plans to
- open a second outlet at a prime location on the highway.
-
- Approach him properly and you can place an order for a girl as an
- escort or a virgin as your mistress. The initial asking price for
- a virgin would be 100,000 baht.
-
- "It takes several weeks for me to arrange a girl for a client who
- wants a mistress," Dej told the Post Enquiry.
-
- He said he supplied a good-looking 17-year-old virgin last week to
- a wealthy businessman in Chiang Mai who wanted to keep her as a
- "secret wife".
-
- A week earlier, he said, a girl he "sold" to a Bangkok man as a
- mistress visited him in her own pick-up truck.
-
- "The girls who work for me are no longer poor. They're happy," he
- claimed. "I'm happy, too, because I am able to arrange
- opportunities for them to live a better life."
-
- The on-going crackdown on child prostitution appears to have
- benefited his business.
-
- "People in the business, especially young girls are now more
- careful than before. They are not as openly moving around as in
- the past," Dej said, adding that young girls who needed money had
- been increasingly relying on his service.
-
- Dej insists that his business is "a kind of merit-making".
-
- "All the girls whom I introduced to my clients were poor, very
- poor. They needed money. So I offered them and their families a
- better future," Dej says.
-
- "More importantly, the girls and their parents are willing for the
- job. Their parents do not seem to mind that their daughters are
- going into prostitution."
-
- Dej started his food garden five years ago in a lane outside the
- town with some travellers. His restaurant sells food, but his real
- business is to supply "poor" girls to those who have cash and are
- looking for good time.
-
- Dej has about 20 girls working as waitresses and their ages range
- from 13 to 20 years. When the Post Enquiry team visited the food
- garden last week, the place was full of male customers.
-
- Dej said the girls who worked for him came from very poor families
- and earned only a few baht a day.
-
- "When they first started the job, they did not want to engage in
- prostitution. But then they came to me for advice on how to solve
- their financial problems.
-
- "I never force them to go into prostitution. I would simply ask
- them whether they would like to go out with a client and earn the
- money they needed?"
-
- He said after reaching an understanding with the girl, he would
- arrange a meeting with the client.
-
- Dej revealed that he had "agents" in the villages who would
- conduct a survey on young girls in poor families.
- "If girls or their parents complain about financial problems, I
- would contact them and suggest ways to make quick money," Dej
- added.
-
- During the negotiations with the parents, Dej would tell them that
- their daughter could "marry" someone who would help solve their
- financial problems.
-
- "Of course, all the marriage documents are fake. So the marriage
- means nothing. But the girl and her parents know nothing about
- this," Dej said.
-
- "If the price for a good-looking girl is 100,000 baht, her parents
- would get about 70,000 baht," Dej explains.
-
- Most officials and community leaders in the North said they had
- heard similar stories in the region.
-
- Kamnan Kobkeo Thongsiew of Hueysak sub-district in Chiang Rai
- confirmed that the money exchange existed but he said he would
- "prefer to call it a human trade.
-
- "The money paid to the parents is like an advance payment for a
- promise of service to be rendered," he said. "It occurs
- everywhere. Parents receive money and allow their daughters to go
- into the service business."
-
- He said a survey he recently conducted in his sub-district
- revealed that about 1,200 girls had gone into prostitution.
-
- According to the survey, the kamnan said, another 1,800 girls left
- Hueysak to work elsewhere. "Two-thirds of the girls who left home
- became prostitutes," he said.
-
- The survey also found that about 300 girls from Ban Rong Phiew and
- about 100 each from Ban Pa Khao and Ban Pa Lieng had become
- prostitutes. "I think most of these girls are under 18 years old,"
- he said.
-