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Press Release
Sex During Port Calls
by Mario Osava (for Inter Press Service)
OFW Journalism Consortium
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- "They are easy to do business
with," 36-year-old Denize Oliveira, who has been earning
a living offering sex services to foreign sailors for 15 years,
says of Filipino seafarers.
Indeed, Filipino sailors are the favourite clients of the
Brazilian prostitutes plying their trade at Maua square near
the port of Rio de Janeiro.
They told IPS that Filipinos -- many of whom stop by Brazil's
ports because they make up one-fifth of all the world's seafarers
-- were the most pleasant and the least inclined to haggle
over prices. "The 'whites' are the worst. They won't
give us cigarettes, and they treat us like whores. The Filipinos
don't. They treat us as equals and share everything,"
said Oliveira.
In Maua square, which is eternally packed with people, buses
and street stalls, the "whites" are Europeans, U.S.
citizens, and some Latin Americans. The prostitutes split
up into groups that cater to sailors of different nationalities.
A majority of the sex workers seek clients from the Philippines.
Sometimes that preference even translates into pregnancy and
children. Early this year, M, who has been working in Maua
square for three years, gave birth to a baby whose father
is a Filipino sailor.
"He always called me before he arrived at a port in
Brazil, and he paid for my plane or bus ticket so we could
get together. We lived that way for nearly a year," said
M. Today, her Filipino sailor is working on ships plying the
oceans in other parts of the world, although she says he telephones
her frequently.
The preference is mutual. "Brazilian women are more
affectionate," said a 49-year-old Filipino who used to
serve in the armed forces in his country and who has been
a seaman for 14 years.
The sailor, who chose to call himself Vicente Perez for this
interview, said: "In the five Brazilian ports I've visited,
the girls speak Tagalog (the national language of the Philippines).
You don't find that anywhere else in the world," he added,
underlying that it made things much easier for sailors who
spoke just a smattering of Portuguese and English.
A 25-year-old sailor who chose to call himself Elmer Cabante,
still shy on his first trip abroad, said Brazilian women were
''pretty, friendly'' and highly sociable.
However, the Maua square sex workers' preference for Filipinos
does not mean the sailors get off without criticism. The women
agreed that many of them refused to use condoms. "If
you insist, you can convince them to use one, but you lose
a client who will choose someone else next time," said
Oliveira.
Cultural resistance to condoms is aggravated by fears of
not being able to perform properly, said Antonio Carlos Sousa,
a doctor who has attended to sailors in the Rio de Janeiro
port for 14 years. The men are already up against the exhaustion
caused by their taxing work at sea, the effects of the alcohol
they have consumed before their "date" with a prostitute,
and the guilt they feel for paying for sex, and the condom
is seen as an additional threat to their performance, he pointed
out.
On board ships, workdays are long and rest is a scant commodity.
When sailors return home, they usually sleep for two days
straight before they can begin to enjoy their time off, said
Sousa. Exhaustion and inexperience lead to accidents, the
main cause of medical problems among sailors, who come in
with everything ranging from sprains and minor cuts to serious
burns and amputations, said the doctor. Also frequent are
depression, as well as skin problems caused by poor hygiene.
However, the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)
has significantly diminished, thanks to more widespread use
of the condom, and to sexual abstinence, because ships stay
in port for shorter periods of time now, sometimes for just
a few hours.
Perez and Cabante said they only practice safe sex, because
they do not want to endanger either their own or their partners'
health.
Perez is a married father of two who said he misses his grown
children very much. His work has kept him in Brazil for seven
months, and the shipping company that hired him has problems
that will delay his return to the Philippines by another seven
months. Moreover, his salary was cut from 1,800 to 1,500 U.S.
dollars a month.
Perez opted for this line of work because his paychecks are
three times what he could earn back home. But he said he did
not like the lifestyle, and that it was often a hassle to
deal with the 10 members of the cleaning crew he heads. He
plans to return to the Philippines when his contract is up,
and set up a small business with the money he has saved.
Cabante, on the other hand, is a seaman by vocation who took
university courses as part of his training. "I like the
sea," he said simply. As a helmsman, he earns just 700
dollars a month, although that is more than three times what
he could make back home.
Still single, he would like to get married and have a family
in the Philippines, despite the fact that his job would keep
him away for long stretches. Movies and television -- especially
cartoons, he said -- help him put up with the monotony and
loneliness a board his vessel. Still, in the next few months,
while he works on freighters that transport cars, Cabante
will continue to visit the women in the Maua square who cater
to Filipinos.
"There are around 20 of us, but there used to be many
more," said Oliveira, who pointed out that many had gone
to Spain. She estimates the number of prostitutes now working
in the square at around 80. Those who attend to Filipinos
charge 50 dollars for the standard services and twice that
for an entire night, although "you always have to negotiate,"
because some clients "only want to pay 20," she
added.
The prostitutes take their clients to nearby hotels or to
their own homes. Sometimes they go to the ships, "if
the captain allows that."
The port of Rio de Janeiro has undergone major changes over
the last decade. In the past, sailors would spend days in
port while their vessels loaded and unloaded. They gave life
to businesses in the port area: prostitution, tourism-related
trade, night clubs and hotels.
But due to technological advances in shipping, especially
the use of containers, the time spent in port has been cut
to hours instead of days. Sailors often do not even go ashore,
said Milton Ferreira Tito, executive director of the Rio de
Janeiro Shipping Agencies Union.
With the changes, the Maua square began to fall into decline.
Several night clubs, also affected by the fear of HIV/AIDS,
closed their doors. When a ship makes port, what sailors need,
more than sex, is simply normal relationships with other people
(Visit Inter Press Service at www.ipsnews.net) - OFW Journalism
Consortium
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Press release contributed by:
OFW Journalism Consortium
Contact address: INSTITUTE ON CHURCH AND SOCIAL ISSUES
2/F ISO Building, Social Development Complex, Ateneo de Manila
University,
Loyola Heights, Quezon City, Philippines
63-02-4265953, 4266070 (fax), jopiniano@lycos.com, OFJournConsortium@yahoogroups.com
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