KARACHI, Nov 30 A prostitute born and brought up in the city's Napier Road red-light area, Shumaila never heard about HIV and Aids until recently. Today, she carries condoms but clients refuse to wear them.

“None of us were aware of the danger of Aids looming over us for years but now we all know and can avoid it,” said the tall 29-year-old who lives in a Victorian-style building in the heart of the neighbourhood.

Shumaila's awareness — rare among the county's sex workers — is thanks to the Gender and Reproductive Health Forum, a local charity that runs a UN-funded programme in Napier Road teaching prostitutes about the perils of HIV/Aids.

“So far we have provided hundreds of thousands of condoms to sex workers in the last two years, which have saved them from being infected with the lethal virus,” said Mirza Aleem Baig, who runs the forum.

Karachi, one of the biggest Muslim cities in the world, has up to 100,000 female sex workers, according to data gathered by Pakistan Society, a local welfare organisation.

“This is 20 per cent of their overall population in Pakistan. Lahore comes next with 75,000 sex workers,” Saleem Azam, head of the charity, says.

Prostitution may be illegal but it has prospered in an increasingly Islamised Pakistan, where an economic downturn and spreading poverty have forced women and men onto the streets to meet the rising cost of living.

Shaheena, 38, is a home-based sex worker. She is a skilled paramedic but seldom finds a permanent job.

“So I opted to enter this business on the side,” she told AFP, veiling her face to hide her identity. “I have siblings, cousins, nephews and nieces who don't know about my second profession. So I don't want to identify myself to embarrass them.

“But it's a question of survival as none of my relatives support me with money. They are all too stretched themselves,” she said.

Azam says more than 60 per cent of Pakistan's prostitutes work from homes or ply the streets, while the elite serve wealthy clients from kothikhanas (houses or rooms) in plush neighbourhoods.

This year's annual UN report on Aids said while the epidemic in Asia appears to be stable overall, HIV prevalence is increasing in some parts of the region, such as Bangladesh and Pakistan.

A survey published in the report said 60 per cent of female sex workers and 45 per cent of their male clients in Karachi and Lahore do not know that condoms can prevent transmission of HIV.

Of those that do, few protect themselves.

“The number of our clients who agree to wear a condom is very small. Female condoms are not available, which can save us more effectively,” said Nasreen, another prostitute in the Napier Road area.

“I can't carry condoms in my purse on the street as we're vulnerable to the police and could be arrested if they find them,” said Afshan, 29, who walks the city's busy streets looking for clients.

The most recent survey conducted by the National Aids Control Programme (NACP) in 2006 said only 18 per cent of sex workers reported always using condoms.

The UN report estimates that around 96,000 people, or 0.1 per cent of the population, live with HIV in Pakistan. The government says only 5,000 people are infected.

The NACP says the disease is spreading among high-risk groups, especially drug users, who mostly inject and use dirty needles, raising fears the virus could spread quickly from addicts to prostitutes.

In 2006, Pakistan said HIV/Aids prevalence among female sex workers was around 0.02 per cent, but independent bodies put it much higher.

“It is at least 15 per cent,” said Azam.

“They are totally at the mercy of their clients. Most of their clients refuse to wear condoms,” he said.

“In Pakistan, this business is illegal, thus there is no law to seriously tackle the issue and save precious lives. Yet a way-out is desperately needed on humanitarian grounds.”

Baig said he had identified an HIV-positive sex worker a few months ago and tried to help her with treatment and a new job but she left because her colleagues considered her a blot on their business.

“Now, no one knows where she is and what she is doing,” he said.—AFP

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