Alika Kinan was
trafficked and sexually exploited over a period of 20 years in the brothels of Ushuaia in Southern
Argentina. In 2016 she made history when she took both her pimps and the
Argentinian state itself to court...and won.
A short film about Alika with English subtitles
“My mother was
prostituted. My grandmother and my aunts were prostituted. My father was a
consumer of prostitution and also a pimp. I don’t know where this endless chain
of prostitution that runs throughout my whole family begins or ends”.
Alika Kinan was 15 years
old when her parents, locked in a violent and abusive relationship, finally
separated for good. She was left alone to look after her nine year old sister
in her home city of Córdoba in central Argentina. “We had no food in the house.
I remember those long days with my little sister, living on potatoes and
drinking mate. Being left to care for
my sister alone and with no prospects was like the end of the line for me”.
Struggling to make
ends meet, she eventually asked her father for help, who told her “you know
what you have to do...” That is how, at the age of 17, Alika entered the world
of prostitution, servicing men in the “Aries” brothel in Córdoba where she had
to hand over 60 percent of her earnings to the pimps. In 1996, at the age of
20, she was offered a flight to Ushuaia, the capital of Tierra del Fuego,
Argentina, commonly regarded as the southernmost city in the world. In the documentary
Cuerpo a Cuerpo (which can be viewed with English subtitles here) Alika describes how
she ended up leaving behind her home city. “This girl, a friend of mine,
proposed that we go down south to work. There was a woman who’d pay for the
flight. She said that we could make good money there. We didn’t have many other
options”.
Ushuaia is a coastal
city with an important port and Naval base, creating a high demand for
prostitution from the sailors and fishermen who pass through the city in their
thousands. Over time the city grew around these men, who came from all over the
world. “They demanded women to satisfy all their needs” explains Alika. “And when
I say ‘needs’, I’m not just talking about sexual needs. They also needed women
to live with, to cook for them and to bear their children. And the women were
their property. They were brought in by the men, owned by the men and there to
serve the men. That’s what this city was built on”.
Ushuaia provided a
location for scores of brothels, under the guise of ‘whiskey bars’ and ‘cabaret
clubs’, which operated with the complicity of the local government and police
force. As Alika explains, “the Russian and North American ships that land at
the port are often staffed by men from the Philippines because they’re
cheap to employ. What’s more, they get paid in dollars, which means huge
profits for the pimps in Ushuaia”. The clubs open at 8pm, when it is still
broad daylight in the city, and service the men all through the night until the
following morning. “It has direct access from the port!”, exclaims Alika. “They
used to get off the boats with their wages and come straight up to the clubs in
the city centre. Brothels are illegal in Argentina, but nobody controls their
operation. Most of the women in the clubs are under the influence of drugs, and
they don’t even realise they’ve been trafficked”.
Alika in Ushuaia - the city at the end of the world |
Alika had arrived in
the city that is often referred to as ‘the end of the world’ ostensibly of her
of own free will, although today she understands that trafficking does not
always entail straightforward kidnapping. At the age of 20 she had already
spent three years in the sex industry, but she was unprepared for the brutal
culture of exploitation that had developed in Ushuaia’s whiskey bars and
cabaret clubs. On arrival, Alika recalls how her exploiters “acted like they
were very friendly people. They took me to the club and I remember walking down
a very long corridor filled with barred windows and doors. One of the doors
opened and a woman welcomed me inside. When I walked in there were lots of
girls in bathrobes who all went to their posts because they thought a client
was coming in. They took me into an office and told me in basic terms how the
system worked. They didn’t really tell me very much. They took for granted
things that I had never imagined before”.
In those years the
prostitution industry in Ushuaia operated in open collaboration with the local
authorities. As part of her initiation she was taken to the local police
station to open up a file and check that she didn’t have any previous
convictions. The policeman who took her details and fingerprints was himself a
regular client at the ‘Sheik’, the first of many brothels where Alika was to be
exploited. Next, she was issued an official health booklet and had to agree to
monthly medical checkups. “They gave you a HIV blood test and a vaginal swab
once a month” recalls Alika. “Why did they do that? Well, I know why they did
it. They wanted to keep the women healthy so we wouldn’t get the so-called ‘clients’
sick. To be a legal prostitute, I mean, a ‘regulated’ prostitute, that was how
it worked”.
Soon after her
arrival, her pimps took her to the local casino “to teach me what to do and
show me off to the men who’d be going to spend their wages at the whiskey bar
later that night. If you behaved badly they passed you on from one brothel to
another, where the conditions were worse. It was a matter of life or death”.
The conditions in the
brothels were terrible; small, filthy rooms where the women slept, ate and serviced
an endless stream of men from 11pm until 6am every day. They were expected to
clean up the blood and semen that stained the walls themselves. Pedro Montoya, the
owner of the ‘Sheik’ club, kept 50% of the women’s earnings and made them pay
for their own food, clothing, travel expenses, make-up and condoms. Their
identification documents and passports were confiscated and they were kept in
debt bondage which made escape impossible. They were fined 500 pesos by the
pimps for turning up late, failing to clean the rooms, having a day off or
daring to refuse a client. The women had to continue attending to men even when
they had their period by inserting a sponge in their vaginas; a method which
Alika’s pimp had apparently discovered on the internet.
“At night the pimps thumped
their fists on the bar and demanded more money” recalls Alika. “They’d say,
‘girl, you’re here to make me money. You’re not here to sleep, you’re not here
to look beautiful, you’re not a famous star. You’re nothing’”.
The walls surrounding
the brothels were lined with barbed wire. “It was a prison. They kept you isolated.
The madam said that we couldn’t have any contact with anyone outside the
brothel. We weren’t allowed to have friends. They controlled everything...there were posters everywhere
inside that told you what time
you had to get out of bed. You
couldn’t get up before four in the afternoon. You weren’t allowed to wake up any earlier”.
One night Alika met a
Spaniard named Miguel Pascual in a bar named “Black & White”, which has also
been investigated by police for suspected prostitution. Pascual was a client
who, without her knowledge, began to pay Alika’s pimps extra so he could spend more
time with her. He told her he had fallen in love with her. They had children together and eventually he took Alika to live with him
in Spain, but the relationship was marked by violence and abuse. “I found
myself in a home where violence was completely normalised”, says Alika. “Later
he started to beat me and our oldest daughter, who was 8 years old at the time.
I decided to escape and I returned to my traffickers in Ushuaia, who of course
received me with open arms”.
As a result of what
she describes as ‘constant violence’, Alika was left with scars on her face, several
missing teeth and still suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. The women prostituted
in the brothels of Ushuaia typically suffer venereal diseases, lesions,
unwanted pregnancies, abortions, regular physical violence and many become
addicted to the alcohol and drugs which they consume in order to withstand the abuse.
There were so many insults. Something was broken inside me. |
In October 2012 Alika
was rescued from the brothel by police, along with seven other women, following
an investigation conducted by the anti-trafficking organisation Protex. Looking
back, she calls the day of her rescue “the first step in our becoming people
with rights. Women with rights. It was the first step towards freedom”. But at
first she couldn’t recognise herself as a victim. When social services offered her
a place in a refuge for trafficking victims for herself and her daughters,
Alika was initially reluctant. “They wanted us to share a house with five other
women from the Dominican Republic. They locked us in at 10pm and came to let us
out the following morning. It was crazy! I was angry and I even felt sorry for my
pimp Pedro. I shouted ‘why have you locked him up?’ I didn’t
understand the nature of the crime and I refused to consider myself a victim of
human trafficking. I saw myself as a strong woman who had arrived there because
she had no other option, which is an idea promoted by human traffickers,
because they make you believe that once you enter the network”, she affirmed.
The social worker initially
assigned to the case concluded in her report that Alika was not a trafficking
victim because she had acted of her own free will. However, once liberated from
exploitation she began to process and reflect upon what had happened to her. “When
I realised I was repeating the history of other women in my family I saw myself
as a victim. From then on I began to rebuild myself. I had internalized my
pimp’s speech. It took many years of therapy and the help of my lawyer and a
feminist organisation who always supported me and taught me to have a gender
perspective. It was a difficult process because you just don’t believe what has
happened to you and I had to look after a family alone. I had to get rid of my
preconceptions, and accept that there is no pride in being a prostitute. The
fact that I was receiving money in exchange for sex didn’t mean that they were
consensual relations. They were rapes, and there was a permanent risk. I have
four young daughters and a one year old baby. I always tell my girls to maintain
control over their own bodies, to love and care for themselves. I lived in a situation
of violence for many years where I was told constantly by the buyers and pimps that
I was a dirty whore, that I was worth nothing. There were so many insults. Something
was broken inside me that was difficult to repair. I don’t want the same thing
to happen to them”.
"The day of my rescue was the first step towards freedom" |
Alika’s courageous
decision to take her former captors and the municipal council of Ushuaia to
court was unprecedented. Following four years of anxious expectation, the trial
began in November 2016 amid an atmosphere of fear and intimidation. Brothel
owner Pedro Montoya, his wife Ivana Garcia and Lucy Alberca Campos, the
brothel’s madam, were all accused of trafficking for the purpose of sexual
exploitation. The case revealed many uncomfortable truths about the government’s
complicity in the sex trade; the state allowed the existence of the
brothels, official records were kept on the prostituted women and commercial
permits were granted by the authorities.
In the months leading
up to the trial Alika received numerous threats and was physically attacked
several times. She was approached and intimidated in the streets and attacked
on social media sites by those who feared being named in court. Alika recalls
being physically assaulted while she out was out shopping with her family. “It
was a female pimp, who I recognised, and her daughter. They jumped on me in the
supermarket. I was with my baby in the pram and two of my daughters who didn’t
understand what was happening. She came running up, spat on me and knocked me
over. It was like that day after day. The threats came from Facebook, anonymous
phone calls, attacks from strangers in the street... it even happened when I
was out on a feminist women’s march”.
Perhaps the nadir in
the campaign of intimidation against Alika came when her former husband Miguel Pascual
became involved. He had stopped making maintenance payments to Alika when he found
out that she had returned to Ushuaia. He circulated a video via social media
sites of what he claimed to be his own daughter being prostituted in an attempt
to discredit Alika and have her children taken away from her. The video was
later proven to be a fake. A week before the trial started he attempted to
destroy her reputation by posting a series of what Alika calls “very subtle,
well prepared and organised” attacks on Facebook from his home in Scotland. Pascual
even testified against his former wife at the trial via videoconference,
claiming that she was exercising prostitution of her own free will. At one
point he even appeared on a radio programme and openly admitted that he had once
“reduced her to nothing” during an argument, and described how he had “twisted
her arm, pulled her hair, stuck my knee in her back and made her kneel until
she said sorry”. When Alika heard it she “thought about how crazy it was that
this guy thought he could say something like that in public. Just think about
the level of impunity, sexism and misogyny... the people don’t see it, they
don’t recognise the violence, even when they are proudly talking about it on the
radio”. She realised that she was facing an orchestrated attempt to intimidate
her and prevent her from speaking out. “They tried to destroy my nerve before
the trial, so that I couldn’t be spontaneous and think straight, so that I
couldn’t sustain the five hours of testimonial in court.”
Despite the dirty
tactics employed against her by those in support of the sex trade, Alika went
ahead with her testimonial and received strong support from a large section of the
Argentinian public, lead by several feminist collectives and anti-trafficking
organisations such as Ni Una Menos, AMADH and RATT. An internet campaign was
launched using the hashtag #AlikaNoEstaSola (‘Alika is not alone’) and there were huge protests in Buenos Aires and
in the street outside the court in Tierra del Fuego as the trial began.
In her epic five hour
testimonial, Alika described how her captors had sold her the “false image of a
family that I had never had... they instilled habits of cleanliness, order and
punctuality in me so that I would be shaped for the brothel’s clients , so that
I would continue to be productive, so that I wouldn’t open my eyes and see what
was really happening.”
Alika embraces a supporter after the historic verdict |
In an historic
verdict, Pedro Montoya received a 7 year prison sentence and a $70,000 fine. His
wife Ivana Garcia and Lucy Alberca Campos both received 3 year prison
sentences. For the first time in history the state was also found guilty; the
municipal council of Ushuaia was ordered to pay Alika $780,000 in damages for
having facilitated the crime of trafficking. It is now hoped that the judgement
will set a precedent and encourage more women to come forward. On hearing the judge’s
verdict, Kinan embraced members of the feminist organisations who supported her
and declared, “now we’re going after the pimps all over the country.”
Today Alika lives in
Sierra Leone with her family. She is a feminist activist and the founder of the
Sappa Kippa institute, an NGO which fights for women’s rights in Ushuaia. She spreads
the abolitionist message wherever she goes and is an advocate of the ‘Nordic
model’, a law which would criminalise sex buyers, pimps and traffickers and decriminalise
prostituted women. She believes that eliminating economic inequality would
bring an end to the exploitative sex trade. “No woman with a decent job,
housing and access to health care would ever give up that stability to be with
someone who defiles her body”.
She strongly opposes ‘sex
worker’ organisations who argue that prostitution is just a job like any other
because she believes that violence is an inherent part of the industry. “You
can’t unionize what is essentially a criminal activity” she insists.
“Prostitution is the accumulation of every type of violence that can be
committed against a person: economic, physical, psychological, verbal. Prostitutes
are required to withstand this constant violence.”
"I don't want the same thing to happen to my daughters" |
Alika campaigns
against the so-called ‘sex worker unions’ such as AMMAR (The Argentine
Prostitutes’ Association) who, in her view, only serve the needs of pimps and
traffickers. “They talk about ‘autonomous prostitution’, that the women want to
do it, that they do it voluntarily. But in prostitution and trafficking there
is a network of pimps; one who buys the plane tickets, another that meets the
girls at the airport, one who runs the brothel...at what point do the women
have any control? How is this an autonomous process?” she asks in disbelief.
She also questions
the problematic concept of ‘consent’, which she argues is often deliberately confused
with the idea of ‘free choice’. “I was reduced to meat to be consumed” she
says. “I said that I had given my consent to be prostituted, and it’s true, but
it wasn’t a ‘choice’ because a choice is when you are given options, which I
never had.” As for the idea that prostitution is somehow ‘transgressive’ or ‘liberating’,
Alika is now convinced that “it reduces human sexuality to dominance and
submission, abuse and brutality. It’s one thing to enjoy sex, but what is often
considered ‘consensual’ sex actually includes prostitution, rape and many more types
of abuse”.
Alika expands on this
point in the documentary Cuerpo a cuerpo,
when she describes her life in Ushuaia’s brothels. “Sometimes you felt a
sensation of power, which is how a lot of the women feel. They’re being
exploited, but at the same time they feel powerful because they think they
maintain control over the men. But they don’t really have any control. The men
are very sure about what they’re doing. From the moment they enter the brothel
they know exactly what they want, because they come in looking for a particular
thing. That’s why, for the reality not to seem so terrible, or so painful, or
so humiliating, or so shameful, we make ourselves believe that we have power
over the men. But once you’re between four walls and they grab you from behind,
by the hair, and they penetrate you, painfully...you’ve lost that power. And
you lose, not only your rights, but all form of autonomy over your body.”
Original article and
translations by Ben Riddick
English subtitles for
the short film about Alika Kinan produced by Ben Riddick in collaboration with ‘Traductoras
Para La Abolición De La Prostitución’, a collective of English to Spanish
translators whose fantastic website can be found here
A list of sources for
the article is posted in the comments box below.
This piece was written using the following Spanish-language articles and interviews as sources;
ReplyDeletehttps://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/suplementos/las12/13-9654-2015-04-24.html
http://revistaharoldo.com.ar/nota.php?id=180
http://www.laprimerapiedra.com.ar/2016/12/alika-kinan-historica-sentencia-la-trata-personas/
http://anred.org/spip.php?article13259
Follow Alika Kinan on twitter https://twitter.com/alika_le