A high class prostitute speaks, "I was considered a VIP and offered as a gift to the heads of companies and politicians," said Carole, 41, a former prostitute who worked the champagne bars and brothels of Belgium, where the trade is legal, until 2013.
She spoke to AFP ahead of the high-profile trial in Lille in northern France of Strauss-Kahn, once head of the International Monetary Fund.
He is being tried from
Monday along with 13 others for their alleged part in a wide-ranging
prostitution ring used by local businessmen and police officials.
"Companies, sometimes
big international ones, would come to see us to ask if a girl could be offered
as a present," she said.
She recalls a car company
that wanted to sell three trucks to a local business: "I had to do
whatever was necessary to make sure he signed," she said.
Eric Dupond-Moretti, a
lawyer for one of the defendants in this week's trial, says "call-girls
are 80 percent, maybe 70 percent of the time solicited" to conclude
business deals.
The practice is
particularly prevalent in professions where corruption and bribes are common,
said Jean-Sebastien Mallet, an expert on the prostitution sector, highlighting
"construction, import-export and the energy sector".
"In some Arab
countries, a businessman who doesn't have a girl in his bedroom will refuse to
sign a contract," he said.
Sex can also be used to
exert pressure. Carole said she was often sent as a "honeytrap" to
seduce men in their hotels, creating the possibility of blackmail down the
line.
The girls for these top-end
clients tend to come from relatively comfortable backgrounds.
"They are clearly not
poor young Romanians. Most work for networks of brothels or Internet escort
companies," said Yves Charpenel, head of anti-prostitution group Fondation
Scelles.
"But even if the
prices are higher, 75 percent goes to the traffickers."
Monday's trial is not the
first high-profile trial for pimping. In 1995, renowned Italian designer
Francesco Smalto was convicted after sending a number of suits to Gabon's
President Omar Bongo along with a group of call girls.
But getting prosecutions
can be difficult, since it tends to rely on prostitutes coming forward as
witnesses.
Gregoire Thery, from
Mouvement du Nid, a support network for sex workers, says the girls giving
evidence in this week's trial have faced threats and pressure to back out.
He adds that the common
practice of using prostitutes to conclude business deals has an added
pernicious effect: creating another obstacle to gender equality in the
workplace.
"When contracts are
being concluded in a brothel or a hotel bedroom, it's a job for the guys."
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