Sex workers' bank builds dreams in India
Fri Dec 7, 2007 8:25am GMT
By Krittivas Mukherjee, Reuters
http://uk.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUKDEL13948720071207
MUMBAI (Reuters) - A bank run by sex workers in India's biggest red
light area is so successful it is not only helping prostitutes escape
poverty that keeps them indebted to brothel owners but also build
homes and educate children.

Located in Kamathipura, Mumbai's red light district, the bank was
started by a handful of sex workers driven by a desire to save for a
time when their bodies stop earning.

With most of them without birth certificates or residence documents,
prostitutes rarely are able to open accounts in regular banks or
obtain credit.

But for two months now, Gangubai has been fulfilling a dream by
squirreling away about a dollar a day in Sangini Women's Co-operative
Society bank, savings that had so often been snatched away by drunken
pimps and local toughs.

"I'm getting old but I can still save to build a house in our
village," the middle-aged prostitute said, her face heavily daubed in
cheap cosmetics.

"I once tried to open an account in a bank, but they drove me away
once they knew my profession."

Although prostitution is illegal in India, it is a thriving
underground industry and voluntary groups estimate that there are
about 2 million women sex workers, most of them trafficked or forced
into the work by crippling poverty.

With most of their lives spent repaying the investment of the brothel
owners, sex workers find it almost impossible to break away from the
cycle of poverty and exploitation, and often turn to private
moneylenders who charge exorbitant interest rates.

Most of the new bank's customers say they are saving to build houses
in their hometowns and villages. Many others say the money would help
them send their children to good schools.

Such is the response that within months of the bank's startup, capital
has grown steadily and the amount remains invested in fixed savings
schemes.

Earnings from the fund goes partly towards paying savings interest to
about 1,000 of the bank's customers and the rest is used to pay
salaries and give loans.

With some surplus cash, the bank, functioning out of three tiny rooms
with the help of Population Services International (PSI), a Washington-
based NGO, has even started a subsidized grocery store for
Kamathipura's estimated 22,000 sex workers.

Shilpa Merchant, the Mumbai head of PSI, which helped with the startup
capital, says the bank has begun changing the financial outlook of sex
workers.

For instance, Yamna Mettgud says she is saving to buy a car to rent
out. "I want a steady income from the business when I am done with
this," the 40-year-old, mother-of-two said.

"Now we are not at the mercy of others," added Meena, a sex worker who
has been in Kamathipura for 15 years. "If there is an emergency like
someone is sick or there is a marriage in the family, we can take a
loan."

(Editing by Y.P. Rajesh)

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