Author: Moldavian
Publication: Zenit.org
Date: February 4, 2001
For Anna, a 28-year-old Moldavian
mother, a promise of work in Italy turned out to be the start of a nightmare.
Instead of finding employment as
a waitress, as she was promised, she ended up being forced into prostitution
in Macedonia, where she became a veritable "sex slave" of the NATO forces.
Hers is not an isolated case in Eastern Europe, according to a priest familiar
with the region.
Anna, who has been taken in by the
Regina Pacis center of the Diocese of Lecce, spoke publicly of her ordeal,
which has lasted almost a year.
"For $100 they could do with me
what they felt like," she said. "They would arrive drunk at any time, pay,
and stop at nothing. I wanted [at least] one of the many soldiers who took
me to bed to help me. But they paid, only wanted one thing, and would not
listen."
Thousands of young women from the
East have suffered a similar fate. But Anna is one of the few who has decided
to talk openly about the abuses she suffered. Anna blamed the NATO forces
in the Balkans, specifically the Kosovo Force, or KFOR, quartered in Macedonia.
According to Anna, the KFOR soldiers
abused her for 10 months as a "sex slave."
Her nightmare began in a small town
in Moldova near Romania. Some men of her country got in touch with her
and duped her with an offer of work in Italy as a waitress.
Subsequently, she was sold in the
sex market and became the "property" of Romanians, Kosovars and Macedonians,
until she arrived in Truka, a small city where KFOR has its barracks. "French,
English, Italian and German" soldiers paid to abuse her sexually, she said.
Eventually, the young woman was
sold again and arrived in Italy from Valona. Her final destiny was meant
to be the streets of the United Kingdom. But Anna denounced her "buyer"
and found refuge with the Regina Pacis center.
The young woman now wants to change
her life and return to her 8-year-old son who is waiting for her in Moldova.
Father Cesare Lodeserto, director of Regina Pacis, plans to travel to Moldavia
with Elisa Pozza Tasca, president of the European Council's commission
on violence against women.
Father Lodeserto explained that
Anna's case is not unique. This is the tip of the iceberg of trade in human
beings, he said. International mafias deceive the victims with false promises
of a job in the Western "paradise," but then enslave them as prostitutes.
The priest said he has many stories
to tell similar to Anna's, and has no doubts about the young woman's statements.
"In Truka, in Macedonia," he said,
"there might be at least 80 young women who are kept hidden and controlled
by organizations of evildoers who exploit them, placing them at the disposition
of the military of the multinational peace force."
Father Lodeserto said that in Truka
there are Moldavian, Ukrainian, Romanian and Albanian women in a situation
like Anna's. He noted that Anna's native area is close to Romania and said,
"it isn't absurd to think of a veritable 'trade route' of these traffickers,
a route in which there are women susceptible to being deceived and subjected
to slavery, to be sold in Europe."