Young Greek
women are selling sex for the price of a sandwich as six years of painful
austerity has pushed the European country to the financial brink, a new study
showed Friday.
“Some women just do it for a cheese pie, or
a sandwich they need to eat because they are hungry,” Gregory Laxos, a
sociology professor at the Panteion University in Athens, told the London Times
newspaper. “Others (do it) to pay taxes, bills, for urgent expenses or a quick
(drug) fix,” said Laxos, who conducted the three-year study.
When the economic crisis began in Greece,
the going rate for sex with a prostitute was 50 Euros ($53), the London
newspaper quoted Laxos as saying. Now, it’s fallen to as low as two Euros
($2.12) for a 30-minute session.
Laxos said the some 400 such desperate cases
he found may be “nominal compared with the thousands of other sex workers
operating nationwide, but they never existed as a trend until the financial
crisis,” he was quoted as saying. He said Greek women now dominate 80 percent
of the prostitution trade in Greece.
He said his wide-ranging study showed that
the number of desperate young women - the ones offering the cheapest sex -
appeared to be on the rise. “It doesn’t look like these numbers will fade,” he
told the Times newspaper. “Rather thay are growing at a steady and consistent
pace.”
The price of sex is falling globally, as the
Internet provides more and more sexual content online. The 180-Euro ($191)
average price of a one-hour encounter in Europe has dropped dramatically, the
paper reported. Prostitution is legal in Greece, but very few of the country’s
brothels are licensed, the paper reported, pushing many of the estimated 18,500
prostitutes operating in Greece onto the streets.
“Factor in the growing number of girls who
drift in and out of the trade, depending on their needs, and the total number
of female prostitutes is startling,” Laxos was quoted as saying. The study
showed that most of the Greek women just coming into prostitution are between
the ages of 17 and 20.
The study comes after a shocking report last
month of an unemployed Greek mother pimping her 12-year-old daughter to a
priest and a retired man for money. The mother, 44, was sentenced to 33 years
in prison and fined 100,000 Euros ($106,153), the paper said. The Greek media
dubbed the woman “monster mom” and the country was outraged by the case.
Laxos said last month’s widely-publicized
incident - and his study - “reflects a society in denial about the changes
taking place” in Greece. “State authorities must finally act rather than
continuing to remain indifferent,” he warned. Deane reported from London.
Πηγή:
independent.co.uk
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