Tourism in Nepal
From treks to sex
Jan 24th 2008 | KATHMANDU
From The Economist print edition
Is a new sort of thrill-seeker heading for Nepal?
“I CAN only dance when I'm drunk,†confides Srijana, a 20-year-old
employee of the Pussy Cat Bar and Shower, a tavern in Thamel,
Kathmandu's main tourist hangout. A few slurps from a customer's glass
later and she mounts a small stage. There, to whoops from a few tipsy
locals, she sheds most of her clothes and gyrates to a Hindi pop tune.
Dangling above her is the Damoclean sword included in the bar's name: a
silver shower nozzle, positioned to spray flesh-revealing water on a
dancer below.
Such gimmicks are common in Thamel's bars, where competition for
lascivious males is fierce. Until a few years ago Nepal had no obvious
sex industry. There are now an estimated 200 massage parlours and 35
“dance barsâ€, such as the Pussy Cat, in Thamel alone—with over 1,000
girls and women working in them. Many sell sex. In the Pussy Cat,
another dancer admits to turning tricks, for 1,800 rupees ($28).
That
is a tidy sum in Nepal, South Asia's poorest country. It is much more
than Nepali women are paid in India's flesh-pots—to which over 5,000
are trafficked each year, according to the UN.
But the dancers in Thamel are chasing a richer sort of Indian:
tourists. And their government seems to be encouraging them. In an
advertisement for “Wild Stag Weekendsâ€, the Nepal Tourism Board offers
this advice: “Don't forget to have a drink at one of the local dance
bars, where beautiful Nepali belles will dance circles around your
pals.â€
In a country with a rich tradition of dance, where paying for sex is
illegal, this might be harmless innuendo. But not everybody thinks so.
During the recently-ended civil war, Nepal's Himalayan tourism industry
collapsed. Some activists think that sex tourism is replacing it.
According to John Frederick, an expert on South Asia's sex trade, “Ten
years ago the sex industry was underground in Nepal. Now it's like
Bangkok, it's like Phnom Penh.â€
The war, which put much of rural Nepal under the control of Maoist
insurgents, has increased the supply of sex workers. Srijana is from
the poor and still violent district of Siraha in southern Nepal. She
was widowed there two years ago, and left an infant son to come to the
capital. Yet she is remarkably cheerful—perhaps because she is drunk,
and the shower is not working.
Source: http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10566777
Last edited: 27-Jan-08 06:25 PM