Mexico's Prostitutes Homeless,Hotels Shuts as Coronavirus Keeps Clients at Home.

Hungry,
scared and tired, scores of sex workers in Mexico City have been forced to live
on the streets as fear of contracting the coronavirus keeps clients away and
the government shuttered the hotels where many of them lived and worked.
Now they
sleep under makeshift tents and on sidewalks, relying on social workers and
handouts for what little they have been able to eat, and on each other to fend
off attackers and criminals.
"They
literally put us out on the streets. We've been on the street for a week;
before we lived in the hotels," said Marina Rojano, who has been a sex
worker for 24 years.
Another
woman, Jazmin Carrillo, said she was jolted awake on the sidewalk earlier this
week when two men tried to forcibly remove her pants.
"I
defended myself as best I could, I screamed for the others to help," said
Carrillo.
The
government estimates there are around 7,000 prostitutes in Mexico City.
In an effort
to contain the spread of the coronavirus, which has infected 3,181 people and
killed 174 in Mexico so far, city authorities deemed hotels non-essential and
ordered them shut.
"We
spoke to the hotels about not removing the sex workers living there ... but
they shouldn't be working because we're in the middle of an international
health crisis," a spokesman for the Mexico City government said.
But hotels
in the working-class Tabacalera neighborhood had signs saying "no service
due to official orders," and removed sex workers, forcing them to set up
tarps and line the sidewalks, according to a Reuters witness and dozens of
interviews with prostitutes.
The city
government said it was setting up shelters for them and is handing out
"COVID-19 emergency support" cards with 1,000 pesos - around $42 -
for food and medicine.
"Nobody
can live off 1,000 pesos," said Rojano.
Still, sex
workers said any help was welcome and on Wednesday hundreds lined up for a
card.
Some have
decided to stop working, but for others, hunger and the need to support a
family mean that is not an option even if they lack the means to protect
themselves from the coronavirus.
"If they
don't even have enough money to eat, how are they going to pay for a face mask,
antibacterial gel, gloves? They don't even have money for coffee, or
food," said Kenya Cuevas, who runs Casa de las Muñecas, a shelter for
transsexual sex workers.
FROM Reuters
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