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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU!3ZLUFUR
- Organization: Central Michigan University
- Message-ID: <930126.084354.EST.3ZLUFUR@CMUVM>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 08:43:54 EST
- Sender: Southeast Asia Discussion List <SEASIA-L@MSU.BITNET>
- From: Elliott Parker <3ZLUFUR@CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU>
- Subject: TH: Flesh trade 2/3
- Lines: 125
-
- ======================= Forwarded Message ===========================
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 23:10:15+0700
- From: Kamol Hengkietisak <kamol@ipied.tu.ac.th>
- Subject: Bangkok Post Jan 17: Sunday Enquiry
-
- 17: Sunday Post Enquiry Part II
-
-
-
- Hoping for a miracle
-
- SIXTEEN-year-old Sriwan Maniwan was doing the ramwong with a
- drunken customer at Pornsin Ramwong Bar outside the town district
- of Phuket one night when the police broke in.
-
- Sriwan and 40 other ramwong dancers, all under 18 years old, were
- arrested, detained for the night and sent back to their home
- towns.
-
- In Ban Ton Thong sub-district outside Lamphun town, Sriwan now
- spends most of her time at an old farm hut with her aging parents,
- hoping for a miracle that would offer her a new life in the form
- of a well-paid job.
-
- "Besides the ramwong job, I don't know what else I can do," Sriwan
- tells the Post Enquiry. "My friends from the bar are facing the
- same fate, I know."
-
- Sriwan and her other friends who returned to their homes in Chiang
- Mai, Chiang Rai, Phayao, Phrae, and Uttaradit, could earn good
- money as service girls but now they are jobless with little or no
- money.
-
- In almost all cases, there is either no work in their provinces or
- the girls are not educated enough for the jobs.
-
- "I don't have enough training to do anything else," Sriwan says.
-
- Her parents -- Mr Ma, 54, and Mrs Kham, 50, sadly look at their
- unfinished wooden house on which they have invested their entire
- savings with the help of their daughter.
-
- "We've run out of money and we cannot continue building the house
- because Sriwan has lost her job," Mr Ma says.
-
- The family has lived in their small farm hut for generations and
- have faced many hardships over the years.
-
- "But we managed to survive with the little money we earned from
- our farm," they say.
-
- A year ago, when a man from Phuket stopped by their shack and
- offered Sriwan a job as a ramwong girl, the family knew their days
- of suffering were over.
-
- They were assured that the job would bring them good money, good
- food, and probably, a good house.
-
- It sounded too good a chance to miss, so they accepted the offer
- and signed a contract, despite warnings from neighbours that the
- deal was a bit "unusual".
-
- Mrs Kham shows the document to the Post Enquiry, according to
- which Sriwan would be paid a monthly salary of 1,000 baht for her
- job as a ramwong girl. Her parents would receive an advance of
- 4,000 baht and another 6,000 baht after Sriwan completes 10 months
- with her employer. During that period, Sriwan would not be allowed
- to return home.
-
- "The money meant so much to us," Mrs Kham says, adding that she
- often felt guilty about signing the contract.
-
- "We had a feeling that it wasn't a good thing to do, it was like
- selling our own daughter. But we didn't have a choice," Mrs Kham
- says.
-
- Several other families signed up with the same broker. One couple
- signed up for all their five daughters.
-
- "Shortly after we signed the contracts and got the money, someone
- came from the South and drove Sriwan and other girls away in their
- pick-up truck," Mrs Kham recalls.
-
-
- Post Enquiry learned that many other families in the village also
- succumbed to the offer of "big and easy money" and signed similar
- contracts with other brokers who made the deals on behalf of bars,
- night clubs and food gardens.
-
- At work, the girls received two free meals a day and a "tip" from
- customers.
-
- But Sriwan insists that she had never been a prostitute.
-
- "I never went out with any customer although many of them offered
- money to spend the night with them," she says.
-
- The "tip" she earned, she says was "enough" to keep her going and
- save a little for her family.
-
- "I could afford to send some money home to help with the
- construction of our new house," Sriwan says.
-
- Her parents agreed that Sriwan sent money home every month,
- sometimes in thousands. "We used the money to buy wood and other
- building material for the house," they say.
-
- Now several carpenters are busy working on the house which is
- about 80 per cent complete.
-
- "Part of the house has been built with my money," Sriwan boasts.
- "I will complete it at all costs," hinting that if she could not
- find a job in her town, she would explore other avenues.
-
- "I will work at some other place where they would pay me well
- enough to send money home to finish the house and feed my family,"
- she says.
-
- A girl in nearby Ban Paen sub-district has done just that. Orapin
- Mulrangsri, who was sent home last week in a child prostitution
- dragnet, left her village again to return to a service job at a
- bar in the South.
-
- "She won't have any trouble with the police this time because she
- is already 18 years old now," say her parents.
-