BATTAMBANG - Dancing girls at bars are believed to be at greater risk of
catching and transmitting the HIV virus than brothel prostitutes who are better
educated about condom use, according to a provincial anti-AIDS chief.
Iem
Sakhan, head of the Battambang AIDS Secretariat, said education campaigns had
been successful in getting many brothels to stock condoms for their
staff.
But it was proving harder to spread the message in bars with
dancing girls.
"I ask a bar owner to talk to the dancing girls for five
minutes but they reject that because it affects their business," he
said.
Officials had begun educating prostitutes in brothels about the
facts of HIV/AIDS and other sexually-transmitted diseases in February 1992, and
asking them to pass on the information to their friends.
"After our
education campaign, we've noticed brothels constantly have condoms available. We
neither close nor open brothels; we control them."
Many bar girls,
however, had yet to get the message about condoms. They only worked at night,
often changed their employment from bar to bar, and their bosses did not want to
cooperate with AIDS education attempts. One side effect noticed by Battambang
officials was a noticeable drop in the number of brothel staff having abortions,
while the rate of bar girls doing so remained about the same.
Dr Tea
Phala, the National Program Manager of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for AIDS
and STD Prevention and Control, said the problem was a national one.
Many
bar girls were taken by customers to hotels or guest houses after dancing to
spend the night with them. The women were often not aware of the need to use
condoms or could not convince the men to use them, he said.
Bar girls
often had long relationships with customers, who even became their boyfriends,
in which condoms were not considered necessary.
Dr Phala said about 7000
people in Cambodia were estimated to be HIV-positive.
Blood tests
conducted on a sample of sex workers - both in bars and brothels - in
Battambang, Siem Reap and Banteay Mean Chey provinces late last year found an
average HIV infection rate of more than 60 per cent.
A July study of
Sihanoukville prostitutes found 39 per cent were HIV positive The last study
done in Phnom Penh, in 1992, found a 9 per cent infection rate.
In
Battambang - where 52 per cent of 250 sex workers tested late last year were
HIV-positive - Sakhan said poverty and unemployment were the main factors behind
an increase in sex workers.
Women from other provinces were coming to
Battambang to work as prostitutes, returning home occasionally with money for
their families, who did not know how they had earned it.
Sakhan said the
spread of HIV had increased suddenly with the opening of Cambodia's borders
several years ago. He believed Thai people traveling to Cambodia had been a
significant source of the disease.
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