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Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Venezuela teen forced into prostitution after illegal T&T entry

Sold by trafficker for $10,000

by

Shaliza Hassanali
809 days ago
20230302

Hav­ing ar­rived in Trinidad and To­ba­go be­fore the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic in search of a bet­ter life, Mar­cia Jim­son (not her re­al name), 17, was sold for $10,000 to a traf­fick­er who then put her to work as a pros­ti­tute in an up­scale Ch­agua­nas home.

Jim­son was one of a dozen Venezue­lan women who were traf­ficked by a busi­ness­man who kept them against their will un­til they were res­cued by mem­bers of the T&T Po­lice Ser­vice five years ago.

Yes­ter­day, Jim­son, now 21, broke her si­lence on the con­tro­ver­sial is­sue of hu­man traf­fick­ing, say­ing she re­gret­ted com­ing to T&T for a job op­por­tu­ni­ty, as she end­ed up be­ing used as a sex slave for two months by des­per­ate and sex-craved men—many of whom came from pro­fes­sion­al back­grounds.

As she re­count­ed her or­deal to Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day, Jim­son broke down in tears, say­ing af­ter her en­counter with hun­dreds of men who phys­i­cal­ly, ver­bal­ly and men­tal­ly abused her for sex, she want­ed to take her life.

Her sto­ry comes a day af­ter Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice Er­la Hare­wood-Christo­pher or­dered a probe in­to the al­le­ga­tions swirling in pub­lic over a UNC par­lia­men­tar­i­an’s al­leged in­volved in hu­man traf­fick­ing, which was raised in a US State De­part­ment Traf­fick­ing in Per­sons re­port in 2020.

Jim­son said she grew up in Tu­cu­pi­ta, where she strug­gled to make ends meet with her moth­er.

Speak­ing with a strong Venezue­lan ac­cent, Jim­son said she was lured to T&T in Sep­tem­ber of 2018 by a Chi­nese man who op­er­at­ed a busi­ness in Ari­ma.

The busi­ness­man al­so owned an es­tab­lish­ment in Venezuela and in­vit­ed Jim­son and an­oth­er young girl to work as bar­tenders in an Ari­ma bar.

“I want­ed to come out of the hard­ships, so I grasped at the op­por­tu­ni­ty. At that time, peo­ple were leav­ing Venezuela in droves to come here to make a bet­ter life and I was one of them. I was in search of pro­gres­sion.”

Jim­son en­tered T&T il­le­gal­ly with on­ly the clothes on her back and her na­tion­al ID.

When the women ar­rived here, how­ev­er, they were sep­a­rat­ed.

She agreed to work for the busi­ness­man for one month to pay for her boat ride to T&T. In her sec­ond week of work­ing in the Ari­ma es­tab­lish­ment, how­ev­er, she said the busi­ness­man and his broth­er forced her to have sex in a locked room where they then left her for sev­er­al days.

“I nev­er agreed to this,” she ad­mit­ted, try­ing hard to con­tain her emo­tion.

“I could not go to the po­lice. I was il­le­gal here. They would have ar­rest­ed me. It was like a night­mare. I was tricked....fooled in­to be­liev­ing that I was go­ing to work as a bar­tender.”

The busi­ness­man then brought a male client to her.

When she re­sist­ed, Jim­son said the man got an­noyed, de­stroyed her cell phone and at­tacked her.

“I was al­so punched in the face re­peat­ed­ly. And he be­came very abu­sive and start­ed shout­ing at me for sex be­cause he had al­ready paid his mon­ey.”

She was then held down against her will and re­peat­ed­ly raped by the man.

She sub­se­quent­ly man­aged to es­cape the busi­ness­man’s clutch­es af­ter he had sex with her and fell asleep on the bed.

Jim­son was lat­er res­cued by her aunt, who was liv­ing tem­porar­i­ly in Trinidad.

She said she then im­me­di­ate­ly tried to restart her life here.

“I know I had to get up and get. I couldn’t stay there for­ev­er. I came here to work to make a bet­ter life for me... for my mom. So, I con­tact­ed one of her Venezue­lan friends, who in­vit­ed me to live in a house in Ch­agua­nas that had 12 oth­er Venezue­lan women. And so, I agreed.”

The women were ages 15 to 35.

That turned out to be her biggest re­gret.

“That Venezue­lan friend was liv­ing with her boyfriend, who was a traf­fick­er. I had no idea. So, when I reach them, the (women) told me they do pros­ti­tu­tion. I didn’t know what to do.”

Jim­son said she put up a fight, but the traf­fick­er, who kept his iden­ti­ty a se­cret, be­came ag­gres­sive and up­set.

“He kept threat­en­ing me with a knife to force me to do it (pros­ti­tu­tion.) He was do­ing that with all the girls.”

Jim­son said she lat­er found out that she had, in fact, been sold to the traf­fick­er for $10,000 by the Ari­ma busi­ness­man who had Venezue­lan women work­ing for him in Trinidad.

Her Venezue­lan friend, un­known to her, was work­ing for the same Ari­ma busi­ness­man she had just run away from, so she fell in­to the same trap of hu­man traf­fick­ing.

“This guy (traf­fick­er) buys them from the bar. So, when he buys them (women), he would turn you in­to pros­ti­tutes. For one girl it was about $10,000. That is how much they paid for me.”

This mon­ey was paid to the Ari­ma busi­ness­man, Jim­son said.

“The girls were told to get out of the house, they have to pay for every­thing. They have to fin­ish with the pay­ments, so they can be free in Trinidad. The pay­ments was they have to do pros­ti­tu­tion to pay for every­thing. You were forced to have sex.”

Jim­son said their pay­ments were sell­ing their bod­ies to dozens of men who they could not have con­ver­sa­tions with.

“He would just bring the men for us and he would col­lect all the mon­ey. I was so trau­ma­tised.”

The traf­fick­er, Jim­son said, would al­so rav­age the girls’ bod­ies.

Abuse at hands of ‘clients’

In the two months Jim­son served as a sex work­er, she said the women had to sleep with mul­ti­ple men every night.

“The women don’t get to sleep be­cause every mo­ment some man would come to the house to have sex,” she said.

On a slow day, Jim­son said she had to at­tend to the needs of no less than ten men. Each client would pay an hourly rate of $600. A girl in high de­mand would cost a client up­ward of $1,000.

“Some­times they pay as much as $1,500 an hour, es­pe­cial­ly if they want a par­tic­u­lar girl. I was one of the girls who was get­ting plen­ty men and that is why he was forc­ing me to have sex so of­ten.”

The pay­ments nev­er go in­to the sex work­er’s hands.

The women, she said, have to of­fer every­thing to the clients. Some women had to be drugged to numb their bod­ies. Jim­son said some clients re­quest­ed or­gies, two­somes and three­somes.

“A few women al­so came to have sex with our girls. We have to deal with every­thing and every­one. And I mean every­thing. They don’t care how the women feel.”

Many times, she said the women con­tract­ed STDs and got preg­nant be­cause the men sel­dom used pro­tec­tion.

Luck­i­ly, one of the women was with a po­lice­man.

“It seemed he had a re­la­tion­ship with one of the girls and had alert­ed the po­lice to the pros­ti­tu­tion ring. The po­lice came and every­one was ar­rest­ed,” Jim­son said.

“The traf­fick­er was ar­rest­ed and im­pris­oned for two years.”

Jim­son was put in­to the St Jude’s Home for Girls in Bel­mont, as she was un­der­age. The women were placed at the Im­mi­gra­tion De­ten­tion Cen­tre.

“I stayed there (St Jude’s) for sev­en months.”

That is when hu­man rights ac­tivist Sofia Figueroa Leon stepped in to help Jim­son.

“Sophia helped me in every pos­si­ble way,” Jim­son said.

Jim­son was al­so pro­vid­ed coun­selling by the In­ter­na­tion­al Or­gan­i­sa­tion for Mi­gra­tion, a re­lat­ed or­gan­i­sa­tion linked to the Unit­ed Na­tions.

“I al­so got a work per­mit.”

Jim­son said she al­so heard that Venezue­lan na­tion­als liv­ing in Trinidad would in­vite “our girls to work in a restau­rant in San Fer­nan­do and when they come here they would sell them.”

In this ring, Jim­son said a po­lice­man was the mas­ter­mind be­hind this il­le­gal op­er­a­tion.

In April of 2020, Jim­son gave birth to a ba­by boy who died 28 days lat­er from heart fail­ure.

The fa­ther of the child was her first love—a Venezue­lan.

Un­able to cope with the loss of the ba­by who brought hap­pi­ness to her life and made her for­get the bad mem­o­ries she faced, Jim­son said her re­la­tion­ship be­came strained.

“We are no longer to­geth­er,” she said, re­fer­ring to the ba­by’s fa­ther.

“Deal­ing with death took a toll on me. It shat­tered me to pieces. I am scarred for life. Com­ing to Trinidad has been one dis­as­ter af­ter an­oth­er.

“I tell the woman back home who wants to come to Trinidad that it’s a hell hole. Don’t be fooled. This coun­try is ram­pant with pros­ti­tu­tion and women are be­ing traf­ficked. It’s on­ly now it’s com­ing out in the open be­cause of the bac­cha­nal go­ing on with the politi­cians.”

In ret­ro­spect, Jim­son de­scribed her or­deal as “a bad hor­rif­ic ex­pe­ri­ence.”

Now work­ing as a care­giv­er, Jim­son said she wants to go back home where she can be re­unit­ed with her moth­er who wor­ries about her safe­ty every day.


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