Saturday, May 7, 2016

Child Prostitution on the Rise in Naivasha


 

 Some things are said and done but you never realize how true and serious they are until you are directly involved. The other day  I was talking to a group of girls in the neighborhood and I was really interested in knowing what they do for a living since they are ever indoors. (Don't think I was prying on their lives we were only having this girl talk when the topic arose.) The girls who are barely 20yrs old boldly told me they are in prostitution business. As much as I pitied them, I couldn't help but wonder why such beautiful and innocent looking souls ended up being night hookers.
Several factors have led to these and many other girls in Naivasha engage in this dirty business. To them, it is the easiest way to put meals on their table everyday, get nice clothes and many other needs. But the bitter truth is that they are physically and emotionally abused, dominated and terrorised by the men. Many people are ignorant of the facts and thinks that this is just another career path those girls have chosen. It is however an abuse they have to endure to make sure they survive.
Naivasha sub-county is well known for its high level of prostitution and especially the surrounding towns like Mai Mahiu and Karagita. This disgusting business booms due to the high number of tracks drivers and their turn boys who lodge in these towns.I have to admit that its in Naivasha I first experienced call girls standing on the streets at night trying their luck.
After talking to my 'new found friends', they revealed to me they are in fact not the youngest lot who practices this business. Other girls young enough to be primary school kids are also involved. With parents earning little on the surrounding flower farms, the young girls cannot afford being kids. Even with the introduction of FPE a decade ago, young girls in Naivasha are being denied their right to education.
This information leaves me worried and with a lot of questions running through my mind. I don't like playing the blame game but in this case I have to ask, who is to blame for the fate of these young souls? Who's responsibility is it to ensure the girls are in school and tucked in bed at night and not chasing after men at night?
As much as we like blaming the government on many things, I think the parents and the society have failed somewhere. We no longer have the spirit of being each others keeper and the African child no longer the responsibility of the entire community as it used to be. We have so much been overwhelmed by the western culture that we have forgotten who we really are. As I log off for the day, I will leave you with a question, where are we headed? Do we have hope for tomorrow if we expose our future generation the way those kids are exposed?