When the shy sex worker was tracked down to her retreat down one of the narrow
Heera Mandi streets yesterday, she admitted with eyes full of desperate sadness
she knew a bit about Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
"Do you think we are that naive? Most of us here know what AIDS is, but no
condom can protect us from serial rape, which is part of our lives now. We are
not "independent" sex workers, so cannot negotiate condom use once a customer
has arrived and has already paid our madam."
Cold sweat
In a voice heavy with despair, she added, "My colleagues here are in a constant
cold sweat over the possibility of meeting a tragic fate, courtesy of Aids, but
I have no fears. I may have it by now, who knows. My only worry is my daughter
because she too is likely to end up in this trade, once she attains puberty."
"I have been living in the mysterious winding alleys of Lahore's prostitute
quarter since I was forced to sell my body 14 years ago to the owner of a
pharmacy in a village outside Lahore.
Talking to Gulf News in Lahore yesterday, Dr Shahid Shaukat Malik, an
office-bearer of the Pakistan Medical Association, said, "Pakistan is
considered at high risk from the spread of HIV among the general public because
of an illiterate population of more than 50 million, the soaring number of
migrants and a highly mobile refugee population."