The chilling ‘invisible brothels’ in European capital where sick pimps ‘dump suicidal sex slaves next to rubbish bins’ ...Middle East

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The chilling ‘invisible brothels’ in European capital where sick pimps ‘dump suicidal sex slaves next to rubbish bins’

“RIGHT now I don’t have any meat for you. Maybe next week I’ll have some meat at home.” 

These are the chilling words a human trafficker used to describe vulnerable women who were unknowingly about to be trafficked across the world for sex.

    BBCWomen across Spain have been forced into prostitution, with an elite police team trying to bust the gangs behind them[/caption] BBCMany of the women are forced to live in squalid conditions[/caption] BBCThe documentary has been granted access to the raids on the illegal brothels[/caption]

    Every year around 50,000 victims of human trafficking are detected around the world.

    But due to its language and location Spain is both a destination and a transit country for victims trafficked for sex into Europe, mostly from Latin America and Africa.

    And there, an elite – mainly female – police unit is fighting to dismantle a multi-million pound organised crime operation hidden in plain sight and liberate the innocent women from the sinister trap they are caught in.

    In sickening secret recordings obtained by the police, women who are trafficked are degradingly referred to as ‘meat’.

    Human trafficking specialist Lidia, a police sergeant who is part of the crack unit, says: “The way they talk about human trafficking and exploitation shows how they denigrate people. It shows how little they care about people’s lives.”

    For many victims it all starts with a friendly voice that offers vulnerable women an opportunity when they need it the most.

    But instead of being offered a fresh start abroad, they are trapped in a cycle of debt by traffickers, holed up in bed-bug ridden squats and forced to operate relentless around the clock as sex workers – driven to drugs and even, sadly, suicide.

    Victoria, not her real name, is one woman rescued by the unit – now in witness protection – with a truly harrowing but typical story.

    She told a new BBC documentary, 100 Women: Raid on the Brothel Next Door: “My father went missing in 1986. Two years later my mother met someone else.

    “This man was a paedophile. He raped my sister. She was only 12 when he raped her. I could only think about getting a job, a house to rescue my siblings from poverty. 

    “I was having a really hard time and then I met a woman. She called me and said she was managing a cleaning company that worked with hostels in Spain. She was going to let me stay with her, sort out a contract. 

    “I thought, ‘ what an amazing opportunity.’”

    When the traffickers arrange for women like Victoria to go to Spain they buy their flights, lend them money and make it seem easy. 

    Human trafficking police officer Cristina says: “Often the groomers are people from the neighbourhood, from the same circles as the victims.”

    Lidia adds: “The victims are often unaware, then they realise it was the person they thought was a friend, or a cousin or someone from their own family who sold them.”

    Squalid conditions

    The documentary was given unique access to police raids on some of the brothels, which highlighted the squalid and degrading conditions the women were expected to live and work.

    One house had rows of tiny red-painted rooms with just a wooden single bed.

    Another raid uncovered the newly-issued passport of one of the victims, stained mattresses and stashes of condoms and cash.

    BBCWomen are threatened with violence and kept under lock and key for the profit of human traffickers[/caption] BBCIn more “upmarket” brothels, many visitors do not even realise the women they are seeing are victims of sexual exploitation[/caption] BBCAn elite female-led team of investigators are trying to bring down the gangs[/caption]

    Victoria from Colombia, tells how quickly her dreams turned into a nightmare.

    “The woman bought my plane ticket,” she recalls. “She travelled on the seat next to me. Her husband picked us up on arrival. They took me to their house or a private home. She said there was a problem with my social security number and she was going to look into it.

    “I owed 3,000 Euros that I had to pay. I was terrified. I told her I couldn’t face that debt.

    “She said, ‘I will pay, but I have a flat and I’m going to take you there, you’ll have to work for a while.’

    “She told me it was temporary, I was stunned. She kept my passport, my Colombian ID, all my documents. I was shocked, I started to cry and I begged her to let me go. ‘No way’, she said.”

    Sick gangs

    But women like Victoria are just a very lucrative commodity for the trafficking gangs.

    Police officer Cristina says: “A victim once testified tear she generated a profit of 40,000 euros in just four to six months. That’s just one person, and they’ll usually have five, ten victims in a flat.”

    Lidia adds: “All the money is kept by the gangs. They will give her a little and she will send that back home, as they usually have children and family there. She is left with nothing. It’s all profit for the criminal organisation.”

    The gangs even charge the women rent, extra for sheets and towels and they get fined if the kitchen is left dirty or the rubbish isn’t taken out. All this adds to their spiralling debt.

    They cram in as many women as they can – in every corner they can fit

    Alumedea Garcia-ParradoDirector

    The documentary’s director, Almudena Garcia-Parrado, witnessed the conditions the women were being forced to live in first hand, often under the watch of security cameras installed by the gangs.

    “They cram in as many women as they can – in every corner they can fit,” she tells The Sun.

    “Sometimes you see their little suitcases not even unpacked.

    “The conditions can be inhumane. You see bed bugs on the mattresses, and it reminded me of when I’ve done work in developing countries.

    BBCWomen from South America and Africa are crammed into inhumane conditions[/caption] GettyPoverty in nations such as Colombia drives the women to accept offers in Spain with the promise they’ll be able to help their families back home[/caption] BBCLidia is one of the investigators working hard to bring down the gangs[/caption]

    “You go into these places, and think how can this be happening in Spain?”

    Victoria bravely tells the horror of her daily life in captivity:  “You work 24 hours. You never rest, you have to sleep with your make up on and just in your underwear.

    “You are not allowed to wear normal clothes, You always have to be in your underwear, ready for any customer that may arrive.

    “You cannot say no to anything because you feel nobody can protect you. The neighbours, the postman, everyone knew.

    “They could have killed me and nobody would have asked any questions. Why would anyone check on a prostitute? ‘Ah, she’s a dirty woman.’ ‘That prostitute, she is in here for the drugs.’”

    Hidden horrors

    Although the unit rescued hundreds of women last year, they know many more like Victoria go undetected.

    Lt Paula Matutano Jimenez, from the criminal intelligence unit, says: “Human trafficking in Spain is an invisible crime. Human trafficking for sexual exploitation has increased since the Covid-19 lockdowns.

    “In the past, prostitution was mostly happening in nightclubs where the Guardia Civil and the police conduct routine inspections. During the pandemic when we were confined to our homes, prostitution didn’t stop, it just relocated to private flats. 

    “Here in Madrid any of us could be living next to a human trafficking house.”

    I remember when one of the girls overdosed, and they said, ‘If she dies, we’ll just put her on the bench next to the rubbish bins’

    Victoriavictim

    Almudena adds that many of the hidden brothels are located in areas popular with tourists, in order to cater for the international market

    Investigators told her that in some places, Brits were among the paying customers.

    “The police rescue victims from all over the world, including English-speaking victims that come from Africa,” she said.

    “Sadly, these victims will be more suitable for British customers. They almost have this catalogue of people that they can offer to the customers.

    “You can come to a touristy place and go and use one of these places, but you’re contributing to the most horrific suffering that a person can go through, and take years to recover from.”

    Spanish investigators have worked closely with UK organisations, including the National Crime Agency, in their attempts to smash the gangs.

    Sometimes the gangs themselves are based in this country, even though they operate in Spain and use the European nation as a transit country for human trafficking. 

    GettyAlthough the capital of one of the largest economies in Europe, the brothels can be found in well-to-do areas of Madrid popular with tourists[/caption] BBCA touching scene in the documentary shows the investigators meeting with one of the women they have rescued and built a relationship with[/caption]

    Lifelong trauma

    The officers say the women are monitored 24 hours a day, often locked in their rooms, meaning escape is impossible.

    And the gangs often make threats to their families back home, leading some of them to desperate measures to end their suffering.

    Victoria says: “I tried to take my own life twice, with drugs. I remember when one of the girls overdosed, and they said, ‘If she dies, we’ll just put her on the bench next to the rubbish bins. I will never forget that. 

    “Girls had fake documents to hide they were underage. They were destroying their lives and their innocence.”

    It can take years for the women rescued to overcome the trauma of their ordeal, ...

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