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Coordinates: 22°35′15″N 88°21′35″E / 22.58750°N 88.35972°E / 22.58750; 88.35972
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The [[Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee]] (DMSC) runs the Sonagachi project and several similar projects in [[West Bengal]], organizing some 65,000 prostitutes and their children. The organization lobbies for the recognition of sex workers' rights and full legalization, runs literacy and vocational programs, and provides [[microcredit|micro loans]].<ref>[http://www.durbar.org durbar.org], home page of the Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee
The [[Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee]] (DMSC) runs the Sonagachi project and several similar projects in [[West Bengal]], organizing some 65,000 prostitutes and their children. The organization lobbies for the recognition of sex workers' rights and full legalization, runs literacy and vocational programs, and provides [[microcredit|micro loans]].<ref>[http://www.durbar.org durbar.org], home page of the Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee
</ref> The DMSC hosted India's first national convention of sex workers on November 14, 1997 in Kolkata, titled 'Sex Work is Real Work: We Demand Workers Rights'.<ref>[http://www.nswp.org/rights/dmsc/indiaconf.html Sex work is real work: We demand workers rights], announcement of the 1997 sex worker convention</ref> The book ''[[Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide]]'' reports investigations revealing that, contrary to stated policy, the DMSC allows sex slavery, trafficking, and underage girls in Sonagachi project brothels.<ref>Kristof, Nicholas D.; Sheryl WuDunn. 2009. [[Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide]]</ref>
</ref> The DMSC hosted India's first national convention of sex workers on November 14, 1997 in Kolkata, titled 'Sex Work is Real Work: We Demand Workers Rights'.<ref>[http://www.nswp.org/rights/dmsc/indiaconf.html Sex work is real work: We demand workers rights], announcement of the 1997 sex worker convention</ref> The book ''[[Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide]]'' reports investigations revealing that, contrary to stated policy, the DMSC allows sex slavery, trafficking, and underage girls in Sonagachi project brothels.<ref>Kristof, Nicholas D.; Sheryl WuDunn. 2009. [[Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide]]</ref>. But be carefull because in sonagachi when you go for having sex, they often rob people and the police there do nothing about it. so just take the required amount of money. or please dont go there


==Popular culture==
==Popular culture==

Revision as of 11:11, 9 December 2011

A scene in Sonagachi, 2005

Sonagachi is the largest red-light district in kolkata, , India and one of the largest in Asia. It is an area with several hundred multi-story brothels and some 10,000 sex workers.[1] Sonagachi is located in North-Kolkata near the intersection of Chittaranjan Avenue Shobha Bazar and Beadon Street, just north of the Marble Palace.


Current situation

In Sonagachi at least 10,000 prostitutes make a living, some from remote villages or districts. Some are even trafficked from other countries like Bangladesh and Nepal. Clients often insist on sex without condoms. Out of fear of being abused or losing a baby, combined with ignorance, these girls are forced into extremely unsafe flesh trade. Many come from distant villages and hardly know what AIDS is before they are sold to pimps. Thus, as they are moved around the country they can unwittingly spread the disease. In eastern India, Calcutta has emerged as a hub for the trafficking of girls, who also arrive from Nepal, Bangladesh and Burma. These girls are coming from neighboring country for doing household work with some racket. Where they force to work as a brothel.From Calcutta they are often sold again to brothels in Mumbai (Bombay).

Today, several NGOs and government organizations operate here for the prevention of sexually transmitted diseases (STD) including AIDS. The book Guilty Without Trial by the founders of the NGO Sanlaap based much of their research into human trafficking in India on this area.

Sonagachi 2005

The Sonargachi project is a sex workers' cooperative that operates in the area and empowers sex workers to insist on condom use and to stand up against abuse. It was founded by public health scientist Smarajit Jana in 1992 but is now largely run by the prostitutes themselves. While some are crediting DMSC with keeping a relalively low rate of HIV infection among prostitutes in Sonagachi -- 5.17% of the 13,000 prostitutes in Sonagachi are estimated to be HIV positive [2] -- this HIV rate is in fact no different than the average HIV rate for female prostitutes in India, which is estimated to be 5.1% [3](the HIV rate infection among prostitutes as well as among the general population varies widely by region in India).

According to some sources, prostitutes from Sonagachi who test HIV positive are not told about the results, and live with the disease without knowing about it "because the DMSC is worried that HIV positive women will be ostracized.”[4] Some prostitutes in Sonagachi have stated that "the clients, at least three quarters of them" refuse to use condoms and “If we force them to use the condom, they will just go next door. There are so many women working here, and in the end, everyone is prepared to work without protection for fear of losing trade.”[5]

The Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee (DMSC) runs the Sonagachi project and several similar projects in West Bengal, organizing some 65,000 prostitutes and their children. The organization lobbies for the recognition of sex workers' rights and full legalization, runs literacy and vocational programs, and provides micro loans.[6] The DMSC hosted India's first national convention of sex workers on November 14, 1997 in Kolkata, titled 'Sex Work is Real Work: We Demand Workers Rights'.[7] The book Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide reports investigations revealing that, contrary to stated policy, the DMSC allows sex slavery, trafficking, and underage girls in Sonagachi project brothels.[8]. But be carefull because in sonagachi when you go for having sex, they often rob people and the police there do nothing about it. so just take the required amount of money. or please dont go there

Sonagachi, 2005

The documentary Born into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids won the Oscar for best documentary feature in the year 2005. It depicts the lives of children born to prostitutes in Sonagachi. "Born into Brothels" is a documentary that takes the viewer beyond the well-known prostitute-clogged streets and into the homes of the children who live in the so-called worst place on earth. If the film has one success story, it's the discovery of ten-year old Avigit whose natural affinity for creating exciting compositions through the lens earned him an invitation to the World Press Photo Foundation in Amsterdam.

There is also a documentary titled 'Tales of The Night Fairies' by Prof. Shohini Ghosh and Dr. Sabeena Ghadioke from Asia's leading Media institute AJK, Mass Communication Research Centre, about the Sonagachi area. It has won the Jeevika Award for the best documentary feature on livelihood in India.[9]

Popular actor Kamal Haasan's movie Mahanadhi has a storyline based on the area. The Malayalam movie Calcutta News also deals with the issue of prostitution in Sonagachi.

In his documentary The Five Obstructions, renowned Danish filmmaker Lars von Trier asks poet and experimental filmmaker Jorgen Leth to name the worst place in the world he's ever visited, and immediately Leth responds with "The Red Light District of Calcutta."

References

22°35′15″N 88°21′35″E / 22.58750°N 88.35972°E / 22.58750; 88.35972