Fear stalks Hong Kong sex workers after grisly murders

An undated photo of Indonesian woman Sumarti Ningsih with a 
friend at a Hong Kong bar, reproduced with her family's permission

Even on a weekday night, the bars of Hong Kong's Wanchai red-light district are teeming -- stern-looking "mama-sans" supervise young women in miniskirts enticing punters with calls of "Hey handsome" and "Let's party".

In an upmarket apartment streets away from the neon-lit strip, Sumarti Ningsih and Seneng Mujiahsih -- two Indonesian women in their 20s -- were brutally murdered.

Their mutilated bodies were discovered on Saturday in the flat of 29-year-old British financier Rurik Jutting, who has since been charged on two counts of murder. Police are investigating whether the victims worked in the sex trade.

The killings are a shocking reminder that, even in one of Asia's safest cities, the women who work out of the bars of Wanchai are acutely vulnerable.

"The police came around and showed us pictures of the two girls to see if we knew them. No-one did, but it was horrible what happened to them," said Maria from the Philippines, who says she is working in Wanchai to earn money to support her three-year-old daughter and an ill parent.

Maria makes most of her money in a "girlie bar", where women earn commissions each time clients buy them drinks at inflated prices or request lap dances, watched over by elderly female bosses known as mama-sans.

Many women work out of a single bar, signing contracts with the owners for six-month stints and living in cramped accommodation nearby.

Organised prostitution or running a brothel is illegal in Hong Kong, but an individual selling sex is not. If a woman agrees to the transaction, she will leave the bar and usually pay a "fine" to the venue to compensate for the time spent away from it.

Many of Wanchai's independent sex workers solicit clients as they drink, but bars themselves can't sell sex on their premises and women are left with little protection when they leave with a customer.

The murders have brought home that reality to Maria and her peers -- but they feel they have no choice.

"I can't be scared... I have to work. I have to make money for my family," Maria told AFP.

- A safe haven? -

Once a den of vice and violence, a notorious playground of British and US sailors, Wanchai is now a thriving commercial district filled with offices and trendy restaurants.

But the red-light zone, mainly centred on east-west Lockhart Road, has persisted and is a magnet for wealthy male expats and Western tourists.

Largely Filipina, Thai, Vietnamese and Indonesian, the majority of those working out of the bars are looking for a way out of grinding poverty back home -- and are attracted to Hong Kong because of its comparative safety.

Police largely leave sex workers alone and the violent crime rate is one of the lowest in Asia. Just 14 murders were recorded in the first half of this year.

It is not yet known whether Sumarti and Seneng were professional sex workers, or simply trying to find a boyfriend when they met Jutting.

Many of the women who frequent the Wanchai bars do not see themselves as working in the sex trade, says one local charity that helps sex workers.

"They're mainly going out with boyfriends or trying to develop an intimate relationship with foreigners," explains a woman surnamed Lee at the charity, Zi Teng.

"Sometimes they will take money, sometimes they will not."

The purchase of sex in Wanchai is often a grey area, said one expat professional who regularly drinks there and declined to give his name.

"For most of these girls, a foreign husband is the ultimate goal," he said.

"If they like you and they think there's a chance you might be boyfriend material, then the sex is often free. But if they suspect all you are after is no-strings sex, they might as well make some money at the same time."

- 'It could have been me' -

Sumarti, a mother of one from a poor farming background, was in Hong Kong on a tourist visa which had expired and had previously worked as a maid. Her family told AFP they thought she was working in a restaurant.

The Indonesian consulate said Seneng, a regular face in Wanchai, was in Hong Kong on a domestic worker visa until 2012 but her status after that was unknown.

Zi Teng's Lee said it was common for maids to end up in the sex trade, or working on its fringes, if they lost their jobs.

"They might start by working in bars and go into the sex trade from there," she said.

The murders have given some women working out of the Wanchai bars pause for thought.

"I can make more money in Hong Kong and it's safer. But I'm scared after these killings. Maybe I might go back (home)," said Noon, 27, who divides her time between her native Thailand and Hong Kong.



But for Cherry, a 25-year-old Filipina mother-of-two, going home is not an option.

"I'm the only breadwinner in my family and I still have two months left on my contract," she says.

"I know I'm probably going to be OK. But every time I look at pictures of the two girls who were killed I keep thinking that could have been any of us. It could have been me."


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