asiaone
Diva
updated 7 Jan 2010, 11:15
    Powered by rednano.sg
user id password
Tue, Jan 20, 2009
The New Paper
EmailPrintDecrease text sizeIncrease text size
Sordid life of a Seremban sex slave

THEY were men she had only met for a few hours.

But she would be forced to have sex with them - whether it was in budget hotels or the backseat of the car.

Sometimes, she was even told to 'service' two men at the same time.

These are sordid details in the life of this 20-year-old woman from Seremban.

In an interview with Harian Metro, she described how she was kept as a sex slave for a group of mat rempit.

In Malaysia, mat rempit refers to bikers who race and perform stunts illegally on public roads.

The woman, who identified herself only as Mimi, is now an undergraduate studying in Kuala Lumpur and is trying to put her past behind her.

Mimi said her downward spiral began in Secondary 4 when she started dating a young man who was a member of a mat rempit gang.

She said: 'Every weekend, we would stay out late into the night. He would take me to watch the gang racing on their bikes and showing off their stunts.

'Hanging out with them was fun and it made me feel like part of a group. It made me feel cool.'

But after a few months, Mimi said her new boyfriend began to show his true colours.

She said he offered her to be 'used' by his friends in his gang. At first, she refused, but she relented as she was afraid of being shunned by the group.

After her first sexual experience, Mimi said she found herself getting addicted and ended up having sex with a succession of men.

Most of the time, she didn't even know their names. And sometimes, she would only meet them for a few hours before having sex with them. Some men, she described, were as old as her father.

'Whether it was in a budget hotel or even in the back seat of the car, I would have sex with them.'

She said once, she even had sex with two men at the same time in a hotel room. She even cut school just to hang out with the mat rempit and have sex with them.

Mimi said she came from a broken home and her parents had no idea what she was up to.

'My family life is very troubled. My parents fight constantly. They don't care what I do outside and they don't want to know my friends. I felt neglected.'

Things changed, she said, when she was involved in a bad bike accident when she was in Secondary 5.

'I was in the ICU for several days. In hospital, I realised that I could have died.

'Being alive made me realise that I should be grateful for my life and turn over a new leaf,' she said.

Mimi's advice to other young women?

'Choose the right friends and don't be swayed off the straight path.'

This article was first published in The New Paper on Jan 18, 2009.

more: sex slave, sex
readers' comments
So sorry to hear about your past but glad that you turn over a new leaf.
Posted by actBlur on Fri, 6 Feb 2009 at 23:11 PM

asiaone
Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn. No. 198402868E. All rights reserved.