Our next round of interviews were at the abandoned Euro Building which is a bombed out 5 story high rise with no exterior walls in the center of Monrovia. Donetta had found a few women and one boy willing to talk to us.
We began to climb the stairs to enter the building but at the second floor a commotion started. When all the shouting began ,a couple of women pulled Jess and I and upstairs, indicating we should just let the men sort it out. Like everything in Monrovia, it came down to money. If we wanted to shoot we had to pay the "landlord" . Another $10 for the big boss and we were good to go. The view from the building was stunning. Most of the large structures in Monrovia are either government occupied or completely bombed out, so it was the first time I was able to get a panoramic view of the city.
Turns out the leader of the "security force" on the stairs was second in command to the "landlord". He was the one that negotiated our entry and would also be the one to choose who we talked to. We ended up interviewing 5 women of various ages, all working as prostitutes. We also spoke with one boy who makes his money washing windows, stealing, and keeping an eye on his girlfriend when she turns tricks. One girl was from Guinea, another just had a baby a few days ago. Most were in Liberia during the last civil war. Most of the women with children had sent them to live somewhere else. In situation like this a child is a liability.
As we were filming, the vibe in the room became much more relaxed and friendly. The same boys who had protected the building by not letting us in formed a loose security for us as more and more people filtered in to see what was going on. .Louis Pulled me aside and said that there was another girl we should talk to. She was a commander in the war.
I began to talk to the boy, whom I'll call Joey, and it came to light that he was a child solider in the second war. He pointed to the same girl Louis had mentioned and referred to her as his "sister" whom he fought with on the front lines and had been looking out for ever since. Joey began to tell us about DDRR and what happened after the war. He told me that it was only a few months ago that his "sister" had begun to come around and start talking again. She went crazy after the war, wandering around the streets and scratching at the ground.
Before we began the interview with her I noticed one of the men was leaning over her aggressively and quietly yelling in her ear. I realized he was probably telling her not to say anything to us. She was young, maybe 18 at most. Joey later told me that the guy was her husband. When the war was over many just settled where they were. The security of this building were "excombatants". These women we are still at their mercy.
About 70% of all LIberian women were sexually assaulted during the war. Often times female soldiers were abducted as children and given the choice to join a faction or die. Girls joined as soldiers sometimes, but more often they carried ammunition, cooked, and offered support on the front lines and at the camps, all the while physically and sexually at the mercy of the groups they were aligned with. Commonly girls were given to soldiers as bush wives. It was better to be the wife of one solider no matter how he treated you then to be used by the entire battalion. It was and is a matter of survival.
We finished the filming, paid the people for the interviews. Security escorted us out very graciously to our car, laughing and joking as we went. Everything was on the level, and it was all good.
At lunch Louis confirmed my suspicions. Yes, those guys were ex-combatants and also drug dealers. He had run into then in his day job as a policeman. The women will probably keep very little of the money we gave them for their time. Most of it will go to feed the whole group, a portion to their husbands and maybe if they are lucky some for themselves. When the government comes and raids these buildings to try and clear them, the people that go live in the tombs in the cemetary in the center of town. They sweep out the bones and squat there until they can go back to the Euro Building.
This was one of the hardest days so far, not only because of the stories but because there really is nothing we can do to help alleviate the situation, not anytime soon.
I have come to learn that here often times the only resource a woman has is her body. Getting to know O as well as I am, one of the saddest things about her condition is that she does not even have that. We decided that we wanted to follow up with Joey and his sister, so arranged to meet them another day.