Commercial Sex Industry Booming Along Uganda, Sudan Border; Teachers Increasingly Joining Trade, Study SaysApril 30, 2008 The commercial sex industry is booming along the border between Uganda and Sudan following a recent increase in jobs and commercial trucking, according to a recently released study about HIV/AIDS in the region, Uganda's Monitor reports. Joyce Namulondo, focal officer for AIDS in Emergencies at UAC, said one of the teachers interviewed for the study said she makes 1.5 million shillings monthly, or about $900, as a sex worker. This compares with about 130,000 shillings, or $77, monthly as a primary teacher in Uganda. According to the Monitor, sex workers come to the border route as new job and trade opportunities become available, and the flow of human and truck traffic on the highway increases. Namulondo said low condom use along the route is disconcerting, adding that there are reports of Ugandan girls involved in the sex trade in Sudan being prohibited from using condoms. "We were told that people there have shunned condom use because they want to produce more children and increase the population of the country," she said. Ferguson said that the majority of people who pay for sex are truck drivers. The study also identified police officers, fuel dealers, health workers, soldiers, teachers and business representatives as some of the people who buy sex along the route. The study found that 70.7% of truck drivers said they always use condoms with sex workers, 68.4% of transactions reported by sex workers involved condom use, and 16.4% of sex workers reported always using condoms. Ferguson also said that in some places, sex workers are paid about 50,000 shillings, or about $29, while in other more poverty-stricken locations, they receive as little as 2,500 shillings, or about $1.50, for unprotected sex. Namirembe Bitamazire, Uganda's minister of Education and Sports, said that she was not aware that sex work among teachers has become an issue. "I have worked in the education sector for a long time, but I have never heard anything of that sort." Ministry spokesperson Aggrey Kibenge also said that he had not heard about the issue but that a recent study conducted in both Uganda and Malawi indicated that HIV/AIDS prevalence among teachers was as high as 30%. Sex work was not officially cited as a reason for the study's findings, the Monitor reports (Nafula, Monitor, 4/28). Back to other news for April 2008
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. |