HAITI: Marie Jessy: "I don't want someone my age, only older men can help me"
Source: IRIN
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
PORT-AU-PRINCE,
3 November 2008 (IRIN) - Marie Jessy*, 16, lives in Carrefour, a poor, densely populated neighbourhood in Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince. She resorted to sex
work when she became homeless in February 2008, but has been given support and training in alternative ways to earn an income at a centre run by the Foundation for Reproductive Health and Family
Education (FOSREF), a local NGO that focuses on preventing HIV in young people and sex workers. "My mum just kept me for two months, then she gave me to another woman. Until I was 12 I lived with
this woman, then I went to live with my aunt. But in February, she put me outside. "I don't have difficulty finding a place to stay because I'll stay with a guy and the next day he'll give me some
money; but I'm hoping to find someone special so I can stop this, otherwise, before I'm 18 I'll be finished already. I don't want to do this kind of work, I want to finish school. "At this moment I
have a place to stay with a boyfriend, because I don't see a way to live on my own. I don't have anyone, just this guy, and the people from the [FOSREF] centre are my family. "I had a friend that
took me here [to the FOSREF centre] and I felt this was a good place; I feel like this is a family for me because they talk to us about the weird things we observe outside, and HIV/AIDS and other bad
things that could happen. They explain what could happen to us if we don't take precautions. I really feel I have a home, even though I don't sleep here. "I always use condoms because that's the key
of my life. There was one guy that forced me and didn't use a condom, that's why I did a [HIV] test the first day I came here [to the centre], but I was negative. "Most guys outside aren't good. I
want someone who can help me; I don't want someone my age. The guy I'm with now is 32. People ask if he's not my father or older brother, but that doesn't bother me because I need his help; I'm
obliged to accept being with him." *Not her real nameks/he © IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org











