Source: openDemocracy
My name is Zaza*. I am a sex worker. I am a lesbian and I am HIV positive. I work in the bushes along Baden Powell Drive, a road that goes past Khayelitsha in Cape Town, South Africa.
With COVID-19, things have been very hard for us. We are not getting any money because we are not getting any clients. Usually, I would go to the road at 8.30am and have my first client by 9am. But in the past two months, since the lockdown started, I have had only five or six clients a day in total. I might get a client by 2pm.
My clients are people who live around Khayelitsha. Usually, sex costs 70 rands (about $5), but now I might have to take only 40 rand ($2.70) – just to have something for food. I just have to take whatever he is offering.
I used to send money home to the Eastern Cape for my 12-year-old daughter. But since this virus started, I have not been able to send anything. I share a shack and I am struggling to pay my rent of 600 rands ($40). Although the government says that there are not supposed to be any evictions, things work differently in informal settlements than in the suburbs. My landlord depends on our rent money to survive, so we have to try to pay rent.
The antiretroviral (ARV) medication I am on makes me hungry, but I need to limit myself because I don’t have enough food.
We are not protected at all when we are with clients. There is very little that we can do to protect ourselves from the virus. Even if I have a mask, maybe the client doesn’t have a mask. We don’t have any sanitiser to sanitise the clients. Where we work, in the bushes next to the road, there is not even water to wash with. We are scared, and so are the clients – which is why they’re no longer coming to us.
Sometimes the police arrive and tell us to go. There is a certain time of day when they come past, which is another reason why I don’t stay where I usually work for too long. But they haven’t arrested anyone. They just warn us to go home.
There is no such thing as physical distancing where I live. We have been told to stay at home and stay away from others, but we don’t do that at all. I can’t stay inside a shack all day. I need to go out and try to find a way to get something to eat.
Sex work is illegal in South Africa. If it was decriminalised, we could be like other workers and apply to the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF). I have applied for the one-off relief of R350 ($24) that the government announced for unemployed people, but so far I’ve had nothing.
We have been getting support from the NGO SWEAT (Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Taskforce), and I get medical care and my ARVs from TB HIV Care. But they are also struggling to give us what we need. What I need most is food and money for rent.