Young prostitutes are taking big risks

The murder of a young prostitute working in the Grand Canal area was only a matter of time, one local garda said yesterday.

The murder of a young prostitute working in the Grand Canal area was only a matter of time, one local garda said yesterday.

According to gardai, the young women like Sinead Kelly are prepared to take risks that the old prostitutes working in the area would not consider.

The older women often turn away men they suspect might be difficult or dangerous.

The older women also keep flats to which they take their clients and often have clients with whom they have regular contact.

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The younger women apparently do not discriminate. They generally have two types of clients for whom gardai use the generic terms "drivers" - men in cars - and "walkers" - men who approach the prostitutes on foot and usually go to the canal bank for perfunctory sex. "Often the male partner, who's also a drug addict will accompany the woman on the beat," according to Mary O'Neill of the Women's Health Project in Baggot Street Community Hospital.

"They're quite happy to have him present, for `protection' and after she does the first punter of the evening he goes off to buy drugs and they share a fix." The younger women are more vulnerable, she said. "There isn't the same bond that you find among older working women. When you're addicted to drugs everything else comes second."

One in five prostitutes interviewed in 1996 said they had been beaten up and 11 per cent said they had been raped.

The 86 women were interviewed for the report to the Eastern Health Board by UCD researcher, Ann Marie O'Connor.

A garda working in the area says they have been concerned that one of the younger prostitutes would be murdered.

It is believed Ms Kelly (21) met a man in the Fitzwilliam Square-Grand Canal area and walked with him to the stretch of embankment on the north side of the Canal at Herbert Place to perform a sexual act behind the line of sycamore and lime trees that shade the canal from the street.

Some people were nearby, but none had contacted the gardai by teatime yesterday. Gardai patrol the area, trying to reduce both the incidence of nuisance and the threat to the younger prostitutes. The gardai work under the provisions of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act 1993. This is the same act which legalised consensual homosexual sex over the age of 16.

The most significant impact of the new law on the streets has been that for the first time male clients can be charged with soliciting or importuning another person for the purposes of prostitution.

It is also an offence for a man to return to a spot where he has been seen importuning previously.

Prosecutions of prostitutes' clients are increasing, gardai say, but this is having little effect on reducing the amount of activity in the Grand Canal area each evening and very little is being done to protect the very vulnerable young women working at the lowest end of the scale.

Of the 220 or so prostitutes working in the Grand Canal area, most have suffered serious assaults or rape.

Between August and October last year, three young prostitutes were abducted at knife point, tied up, stripped naked, raped and beaten by one man.

Things are said to be equally bad for the 200 to 250 prostitutes who work the streets around Benburb Street on the northside.

In another investigation this year, following a complaint of a rape by one of the young prostitutes on the Grand Canal, Garda questioning of other young prostitutes quickly uncovered two who had been raped by the same man but had not reported it.

Last Saturday another of the young women of the Grand Canal was taken to hospital after a serious assault in which both her wrists were broken. She is recovering in hospital.

Even the prostitutes who work from city centre flats are not immune from serious attack.

The last prostitute murdered in Dublin was Belinda Periera, the 22-year-old Londoner of Sri Lankan extraction who was bludgeoned to death in a flat in Liffey Street shortly before New Year's Eve 1997.

She had had up to 30 clients in the four days between St Stephen's Day and New Year's Eve. No one has been charged with her murder.

Earlier this year, the Circuit Court heard that a £150an-hour prostitute was seriously injured when she was punched and kicked in a Dublin hotel.